Comparing headwater stream thermal sensitivity across two contrasting
lithologies in Northern California
Abstract
Understanding drivers of thermal regimes in headwater streams is
critical for a comprehensive understanding of freshwater ecological
condition and habitat resilience to disturbance, and to inform
sustainable forest management policies and decisions. However, stream
temperatures may vary depending on characteristics of the stream,
catchment, or region. To improve our knowledge of the key drivers of
stream thermal regime, we collected stream and air temperature data
along eight headwater streams in two regions with distinct lithology,
climate, and riparian vegetation. Five streams were in the Northern
California Coast Range at the Caspar Creek Experimental Watershed Study,
which is characterized by permeable sandstone lithology. Three streams
were in the Cascade Range at the LaTour Demonstration State Forest,
which is characterized by fractured and resistant basalt lithology. We
instrumented each stream with 12 stream temperature and four air
temperature sensors during summer 2018. Our objectives were to compare
stream thermal regimes and thermal sensitivity—slope of the linear
regression relationship between daily stream and air
temperature—within and between both study regions. Mean daily stream
temperatures were ~4.7 °C warmer in the Coast Range but
were less variable (SD = 0.7 °C) compared to the Cascade Range (SD = 2.3
°C). Median thermal sensitivity was 0.33 °C °C-1 in
the Coast Range and 0.23 °C °C-1 in the Cascade Range.
We posit that the volcanic lithology underlying the Cascade streams
likely supported discrete groundwater discharge locations, which
dampened thermal sensitivity. At locations of apparent groundwater
discharge in these streams, median stream temperatures rapidly decreased
by 2.0 °C, 3.6 °C, and 7.0 °C relative to adjacent locations,
approximately 70–90 meters upstream. In contrast, thin friable soils in
the Coast Range likely contributed baseflow from shallow subsurface
sources, which was more sensitive to air temperature and generally
warmed downstream (up to 2.1 °C km-1). Our study
revealed distinct longitudinal thermal regimes in streams draining
contrasting lithology, suggesting that streams in these different
regions may respond differentially to forest disturbances or climate
change.