Alexander Brooks

and 2 more

Water-mediated linkages that connect landscape components are collectively referred to as hydrologic connectivity. In river-floodplain systems, quantifying hydrologic connectivity enables descriptions of hydrologic function that emerge from complex, heterogeneous interactions of underlying geomorphic, climatic and biologic controls. Here, we measure hydrologic connectivity using field indicators and develop a continuous connectivity metric that represents a vector strength between a source along the North St Vrain river to ten surface water target sites within the river-floodplain system. To measure this connectivity strength, we analyzed hydrometric, injected conservative tracers, and natural occurring geochemical and microbial indicators across streamflows in 2018. We developed empirical models of hydrologic connectivity as a function of river stage to predict daily connectivity strength across multiple floodplain sites for five years between May and September of 2016-2020. Three sites were either consistently connected or disconnected to the river, while seven varied across time in their hydrologic connectivity strength. Of the sites with variable connectivity, some disconnected very quickly and others had a prolonged disconnection phase. By scaling site dynamics to the system scale, we found across-system hydrologic connectivity always increased with streamflow while across-system variance in hydrologic connectivity peaked at intermediate streamflow. At sites with intermittent connections to the river, river stage disconnection thresholds were variable (308 to 650 mm) and their connectivity dynamics were sensitive to inter-annual variation in streamflows, suggesting that future connectivity behavior under climate change will depend on how flow durations change across a range of flow states.

Allison E. Rhea

and 3 more

Forested watersheds provide many ecosystem services that have become increasingly threatened by wildfire. Stream nitrate (NO 3 -) concentrations often increase following wildfire and can remain elevated for decades. We investigated the drivers of persistent elevated stream NO 3 - in nine watersheds that were burned to varying degrees 16 years prior by the Hayman fire, Colorado, USA. We evaluated the ability of multiple linear regression and spatial stream network modeling approaches to predict observed concentrations of the biologically active solute NO 3 - and the conservative solute sodium (Na +). Specifically, we quantified the degree to which landscape and stream network characteristics predict stream solute concentrations. No landscape variables were strong predictors of stream Na +. Rather, stream Na + variability was largely attributed to flow-connected spatial autocorrelation, indicating that downstream hydrologic transport was the primary driver of spatially distributed Na + concentrations. In contrast, vegetation cover, measured as mean normalized differenced moisture index (NDMI), was the strongest predictor of spatially distributed stream NO 3 - concentrations. Furthermore, stream NO 3 - concentrations had weak flow-connected spatial autocorrelation and high spatial variability. This pattern is likely the result of spatially heterogeneous wildfire behavior that leaves intact forest patches interspersed with high burn severity patches that are dominated by shrubs and grasses. Post-fire vegetation also interacts with watershed structure to influence stream NO 3 - patterns. For example, severely burned convergent hillslopes in headwaters positions were associated with the highest stream NO 3 ‑ concentrations due to the high proportional influence of hillslope water in these locations. Our findings suggest that reforestation is critical for the recovery of stream NO 3 - concentrations to pre-fire levels and targeted planting in severely burned convergent hillslopes in headwater positions will likely have a large impact on stream NO 3 - concentrations.

Timothy Fegel

and 6 more

Headwater forest ecosystems of the western U.S. generate a large portion of the dissolved organic matter (DOM) transported across North America. Land cover changes that alter forest structure and forest species composition affect the quantity and composition of DOM transferred to aquatic ecosystems. Clear-cut harvesting effects ~1% of the forest area of North America annually, leaving most forests in varying stages of successional regrowth, and the total area of old-growth forest decreasing. The consequences of this widespread management practice on watershed carbon cycling remain unknown. We investigated the role of land cover change from old-growth subalpine forest to lodgepole pine dominated second-growth on the character and reactivity of DOM hillslope exports. We evaluated inputs of DOM from litter leachates and export of DOM collected at the base of trenched hillslopes during a three-year period (2016-2018) at the Fraser Experimental Forest in northcentral Colorado, USA. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and total dissolved nitrogen (TDN) were higher in lateral subsurface flow draining old- versus secondary-growth forest. Fluorescence spectroscopy showed that the DOM exported from the old-growth forest was more heterogeneous and aromatic and that proteinaceous, microbially processed DOM components were more prevalent in the second-growth forest. Biological oxygen demand (BOD) assays revealed much lower microbial metabolism of both DOM inputs from litter leachate and subsurface exports from old-growth forest. Old-growth and second-growth forests are co-mingled in managed ecosystems, and our findings demonstrate that the influence of species composition on DOM inputs can affect the reactivity of DOM transferred from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems.