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1.
A 5-m-deep gravel pit was excavated from 1996 to 1998 in the floodplain between Willow Creek, Alberta, and a grove of balsam poplars ('cottonwoods', Populus balsamifera L.) and water level at the pit was lowered 2.5 m through pumping. This interrupted the infiltration of stream water into the riparian groundwater and imposed drought stress on the cottonwoods. Trees in the drought-affected grove displayed extensive leaf senescence and abscission in late August 1998, while trees in nearby control groves remained green until autumnal senescence in late September. The precocious senescence was accompanied by a two-thirds reduction in leaf stomatal conductance (g s) but mid-day leaf xylem water potentials (ψl) were only slightly reduced (?1.55 vs 1.42 MPa). Pumping ceased in 1999, the pit was partially refilled, and the hydraulic linkage between the stream and the riparian zone recovered. Subsequently in August 1999, g s and ψl were similar for trees in the affected and control groves and senescence phenologies were similar in 1999 and 2000. Annual branch growth increments varied 3-fold across years between 1994 and 1999, but there was no reduction in these growth increments in the drought-affected trees in 1998 or 1999. This study supports the hydraulic linkage between a stream and the adjacent riparian zone in a semi-arid region and demonstrates the vulnerability of riparian cottonwoods to drought due to water table depletion. It also indicates rapid physiological recovery of cottonwoods following restoration of water availability.  相似文献   

2.
With drainage from the Waterton‐Glacier International Peace Park, the Waterton River was dammed in 1964 to trap spring flow and permit offstream diversion for irrigation. Field observations in the 1980s indicated some decrepit riparian woodlands suggesting drought stress of the black and narrowleaf cottonwoods (Populus trichocarpa, P. angustifolia) due to insufficient in‐stream flows. Subsequently, an environmental flow regime commenced in 1991 and provided “functional flows,” deliberately regulating in‐stream flow components intended to restore ecological processes and particularly (1) an increase of the minimum flow from 0.93 to 2.27 m3/s (mean discharge 21.9 m3/s) and (2) flow ramping, gradual recession after the spring peak. This study investigated the historic flow patterns and the growth, population age structure, and spatial distributions of riparian cottonwoods along the free‐flowing upstream and regulated downstream reaches over four dam operations intervals: the free‐flowing pre‐dam condition; the initial dammed interval to the mid‐1970s; a post‐dam and drought interval in the 1980s; and with the environmental flow regime. Analyses of sapling, shrub‐, and tree‐sized cottonwoods included tree ring analyses to determine ages and growth patterns, and distributions were assessed relative to streamside elevations and sediment textures. These indicated that there has been progressive cottonwood colonization after damming but the colonization band dropped in elevation with the reduced flow regime and the future woodlands could become narrower. The tree ring analyses indicated that the growth of established trees benefited from the functional flows and the increase in minimum flow was probably particularly beneficial to the riparian cottonwoods.  相似文献   

3.
Plant root architecture reveals the sources of water and nutrients but tree root systems are large and difficult to analyze. With riparian (floodplain) trees, river cut-banks provide natural hydraulic excavation of root systems and this presents a unique study opportunity. Subsequently, we developed the ‘Cut-bank Root Method’, a simple, quantitative approach for analyzing the distribution of coarse roots, based on analyses of photographs of river cut-banks. These reveal the vertical extent of roots and median root depths (Rd). We applied this method along six rivers draining the Canadian Rocky Mountains and observed tenfold difference in Rd. The floodplain forests were dominated by cottonwoods and from mountain to prairie zones we observed progressively deeper roots of Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood, Rd ~ 0.3 m), P. balsamifera (balsam poplar), P. angustifolia (narrowleaf cottonwood), and P. deltoides (prairie cottonwood, Rd ~ 0.9 m), which had Rd similar to P. fremontii (Fremont cottonwood) in Nevada, USA. Roots were shallower for co-occurring facultative riparian trees, with Rd ~ 0.1 m for P. tremuloides (trembling aspen) and Picea glauca (white spruce). Across the Canadian sites, Rd for cottonwoods were strongly associated with a growth season moisture index (May through September precipitation—potential evapotranspiration; R2 = 0.97, P < 0.001). Thus, in wetter climates, riparian cottonwoods were shallow-rooted and would be more dependent upon rain than stream flow. Conversely, in the drier semi-arid regions the cottonwoods were phreatophytic, with deeper root systems in the capillary fringe above the alluvial ground-water table. These phreatophytic cottonwoods would be highly dependent upon stream flow and vulnerable to declining river flows due to river regulation or climate change.  相似文献   

4.
Globally, water and temperature provide the dominant environmental determinants of tree distribution and growth. In riparian or streamside zones, groundwater is abundant, and we consequently predicted that temperature would limit the growth of riparian cottonwoods in a cool climate northern mountain region. To investigate this association, we analyzed tree rings of 167 black cottonwoods, Populus trichocarpa, along two adjacent Rocky Mountain creeks in Alberta. Cottonwoods were sampled from 1700 m, near their upper elevational limit, down 500 m through three progressively warmer ecoregions, the montane, aspen parkland, and fescue prairie. Across these zones, June through September mean temperatures rose from 12.4 to 16.2°C (lapse rate = 0.67°C/100 m), and there was subsequently a 42% increase in growing degree days (base 5°C, GDD5) from 900 GDD5 at the trees’ upper limit. Despite this variation, growth rate of most trees was fairly consistent across the ecoregions; trunk diameter versus age associations were relatively similar (r 2 = 0.85) with an estimated 14% increase in trunk sizes of 50 year-old trees with decreasing elevation. In all ecoregions, developmental patterns were prominent as annual radial increments increased up to about 20 years, and then progressively declined to an apparent lethal threshold of about 0.4 mm/year at about 100 years. Basal area increments also increased through the juvenile phase, but remained fairly constant thereafter. The weak association between growth and temperature suggests that other environmental factors limited growth rates or there were differences in temperature adaptation across these elevational ecoregions. The results suggest that predicted regional climate warming may not substantially promote the growth rates of these Rocky Mountain trees.  相似文献   

5.
Cottonwoods are poplars (Populus sp.) adapted to riparian (streamside) zones and an understanding of their growth within these zones will assist with river management for cottonwood conservation and in the recognition of superior parental genotypes for hybrid poplar breeding programs. In this study we analyzed cottonwood growth in native riparian zones and compared growth along three study reaches of the Oldman River in Alberta, Canada that differed in geomorphic context, particularly the extent that the river channel was constrained by steep banks and bedrock. We used dendrochronology to analyze trunk growth patterns, and measured annual radial increments (RI) and basal area increments (BAI) of 278 narrowleaf cottonwoods (P. angustifolia), black cottonwoods (P. trichocarpa), their intrasectional hybrids, and natural intersectional hybrids with prairie cottonwoods (P. deltoides). The trees displayed common growth patterns with four phases: (I) a 3–7-year establishment phase with RI of about 1–2 mm/year, (II) a growth acceleration phase of about 15 years with RI increasing to the (III) RI growth peak of about 3 mm/year, and then (IV) the mature growth phase with relatively constant BAI and progressively declining RI. This general pattern was consistent across study reaches but the durations and growth rates of the phases differed along with forest stand structure. Along the unconstrained alluvial reach with a broad floodplain and dynamic channel, extensive and dense forest groves occurred. This increased tree competition, as evidenced by reduced RI and BAI in the mature phase. In contrast, along a constrained reach trees were restricted to sparse, narrow bands and their increased growth rates in the mature phase probably reflected reduced competition. Cottonwoods along the intermediate reach demonstrated an intermediate combination of forest and growth characteristics. Genotypic effects were slight although P. angustifolia had reduced RI during the establishment phase. These results demonstrate that within native riparian zones cottonwoods display an inherent growth pattern that reflects the trees' life history, and that growth rates and transitions are influenced by the geomorphic context that influences forest structure.  相似文献   

6.
Cottonwoods, riparian poplars, are facultative phreatophytes and can obtain water from shallow soil moisture originating from rainfall, or from the deeper capillary fringe above the alluvial water table that is recharged by river water infiltration. The correspondence between cottonwood growth and river flows should reveal the dependency upon alluvial groundwater and subsequently, the vulnerability to reduced river flows. To explore this association, we analyzed historic growth patterns of plains cottonwoods (Populus deltoides) along the Red Deer River (RDR), which is at the northwestern limit of the North American Great Plains. We developed chronologies of yearly radial increments (RI) and basal area increments (BAI) and explored correspondences with the environmental records from the past century. In this semi-arid region, the RI or BAI were not correlated with local precipitation while negative correlation with growth season temperature (T) (r = −0.37, p < 0.01) could reflect reduced growth with hot summers. There was correlation between growth and annual river discharge (Q, and particularly log Q that approximates river stage) and this increased with two year averaging (r = 0.51, p < 0.01), reflecting carry-over in the watershed hydrology and in the ecophysiological response. There was correspondence with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation index (PDO, r = −0.45, p < 0.01), which provides multi-decade transitions that influence Rocky Mountain headwater precipitation and other weather characteristics, and river flows. The combination of Q, PDO and T provided the strongest multiple regression model, accounting for 44% of the historic growth variation (52% correspondence for 1953–2013). The RDR was dammed in 1983, enabling winter flow augmentation, but summer flows were sustained and cottonwood growth and the streamflow correspondence persisted. This indicates that it is the pattern of dam operation and not damming per se that determines the fate of established riparian cottonwoods downstream. This study revealed that these cottonwoods are phreatophytic and dependent upon alluvial groundwater that is recharged from the river. This provides a research strategy to determine whether riparian woodlands along other regulated rivers are similarly groundwater-dependent and could be vulnerable to river flow reductions from excessive water withdrawal for irrigation or other uses, or with climate change.  相似文献   

7.
Aim Ecoregions represent biophysical zones where environmental factors enable the development of particular plant communities. Ecoregions are generally large but abrupt transitions occur in areas with rapid physical change. A particularly abrupt transitional sequence occurs in the Rocky Mountain region of south‐western Alberta where fescue prairie, aspen parkland and mountain ecoregions occur within 15 km. To investigate plant adaptation across ecoregions, our study investigated the influences of a natural disturbance (flooding) and an artificial disturbance (cattle grazing) on reproductive and population processes of black cottonwood (Populus balsamifera subsp. trichocarpa, Torr. & Gray), the dominant riparian tree. Location We studied cottonwoods throughout their elevational range along two free‐flowing, first‐order streams, Yarrow and Drywood creeks. Cottonwood was the only prominent tree in the prairie ecoregion, the dominant riparian tree in the parkland and extended upward through the montane ecoregion where it was a pioneer species for the mixed coniferous–deciduous woodland. Cottonwoods did not occur in the higher elevation sub‐alpine ecoregion. Methods Thirty‐six cross‐sectional sampling transects were located across the three ecoregions with cottonwoods, and in ungrazed and grazed areas of each ecoregion. Rectangular 100 m2 tree and 2 m2 seedling quadrats were positioned along the transects, and substrate and vegetation were assessed. Historic hydrological data were analysed relative to flood recurrences and seasonal flow patterns. Results Overall, the cottonwoods displayed a sawtooth shaped ‘punctuated progressive age structure’ with many young trees, progressively fewer older trees, and about four pulses of increased recruitment over the past century. This was considered to provide a healthy cottonwood population and recruitment pulses were apparently associated with flood events with appropriate peak timing and magnitude and a gradual post‐flood stage recession. However, analyses of tree, sapling and seedling data indicated that flood‐associated seedling recruitment was less important and clonal processes were more important for cottonwood recruitment in the montane ecoregion, the highest ecoregion with cottonwoods. The correlation between flood events and cottonwood recruitment was strongest in the mid‐elevation parkland ecoregion suggesting greater reliance on flood‐associated seedling recruitment. There was little correlation with flooding and limited recruitment in the fescue prairie ecoregion in recent decades and the disturbed age structure probably results from cattle impacts that have prevented recruitment and produced a decrepit cottonwood forest population. Main conclusions These analyses suggested that a healthy cottonwood population displayed a sawtooth shaped ‘punctuated progressive age structure’ and that cottonwood reproduction processes varied across ecoregions with increased clonality in the highest montane ecoregion. Cattle grazing impacts on reproduction were most severe in the lowest prairie ecoregion that is treeless except for the riparian zone. We conclude that appropriate strategies of instream flow regulation, land‐use policies and practices, and conservation and restoration efforts should be refined according to ecoregion to recognize the differences in cottonwood reproductive and population ecology.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanisms of Riparian Cottonwood Decline Along Regulated Rivers   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Decline of riparian forests has been attributed to hydrologic modifications to river flows. However, little is known about the physiological and structural adjustments of riparian forests subject to modified flow regimes, and the potential for forest restoration using historic flow regimes is poorly understood. In this paired river study, we compared hydrology, water relations, and forest structure in cottonwood-dominated floodplains of the regulated Green River to those of the unregulated Yampa River. We measured floodplain groundwater levels, soil water availability, cottonwood xylem pressure (Ψxp), and leaf-level stomatal conductance (gs) to assess current impacts of river regulation on the water status of adult cottonwoods. We also simulated a flood on the former floodplain of the regulated river to evaluate its impact on cottonwood water relations. Canopy and root structure were quantified with estimates of cottonwood leaf area and percent live canopy and root density and biomass, respectively. Regulation of the Green River has lowered the annual peak flow yet raised minimum flows in most years, resulting in a 60% smaller stage change, and lowered soil water availability by as much as 70% compared to predam conditions. Despite differences in water availability, daily and seasonal trends in Ψxp and gs were similar for cottonwoods on the regulated and unregulated rivers. In addition, soil water added with the experimental flood had little effect on cottonwood water relations, contrary to our expectations of alleviated water stress. Green River cottonwoods had 10%–30% lower stand leaf area, 40% lower root density, and 25% lower root biomass compared with those for Yampa River cottonwoods. Our results suggest that water relations at the leaf and stem level are currently similar for Yampa and Green River trees due to structural adjustments of cottonwood forests along the Green River, triggered by river regulation.  相似文献   

9.
To assess the likely effects on three coexisting species of Australian freshwater fish of riparian loss, we examined the temperature, light, and habitat preferences of each species in relation to commonly documented effects of riparian degradation on stream environments. Such effects include reduced shade, instream structure, and water depth and increased temperature and invasive instream vegetation. Xiphophorus helleri, Gambusia holbrooki, and Melanotaenia duboulayi differed significantly in mean swimming depth, preferences for light and habitat, and in their patterns of behavioural change through the day. Values of interspecific spatial overlap (25–58%) indicated that the overall environmental preferences of G. holbrooki, X. helleri, and M. duboulayi were reasonably distinct. Habitat alterations associated with riparian removal are likely to favour the exotic species G. holbrooki over the native species M. duboulayi, but the results for X. helleri suggest that not all poeciliid␣species are strong indicators of degraded conditions.  相似文献   

10.
11.
1. Measurements of ecological patterns are often used as primary biological indicators of river health. However, these patterns provide little information about important stream ecosystem processes (e.g. the sources and fate of energy and nutrients). The direct measurement of these processes is considered fundamental to the determination of the health of stream and river ecosystems. 2. In this paper we used two basic approaches to assess stream ecosystem response to catchment disturbance and, particularly, to the loss of riparian vegetation in different forested biomes across Australia. Benthic gross primary production (GPP) and respiration (R24) provided measures of the amounts of organic carbon produced and consumed within the system, respectively. Stable isotope analysis was used to trace the fate of terrestrial and instream sources of organic matter in the aquatic food web. In a focal catchment in SE Queensland, additional measurements were taken of riparian attributes, catchment features and water quality. 3. Baseline measurements of GPP and R24 from undisturbed forest streams provided reference values for healthy streams for comparison with sites where the catchment or riparian vegetation had been disturbed. These values of metabolism were low by world standards in all biomes examined. Preliminary data from the Mary River catchment in SE Queensland indicated that these parameters were sensitive to variations in riparian canopy cover and, to a lesser extent, catchment clearing, and predictive models were developed. The ratio P : R (GPP : R24) was used to determine whether sites were net consumers (P < R) or producers (P > R) of carbon but this was not considered a reliable indicator of stream health on its own. 4. Although forest streams were typically net consumers of carbon (P < < R), stable isotope analysis of metazoan food webs indicated a high dependence on inconspicuous epilithic algae in some biomes. 5. A dramatic decline in the health of forest streams was observed when GPP substantially exceeded R24, especially when instream primary producers shifted from palatable unicellular algae to prolific filamentous green algae and macrophytes. These sources of instream production do not appear to enter aquatic food webs, either directly through grazing or indirectly through a detrital loop. Accumulation of these plants has led to changes in channel morphology, loss of aquatic habitat and often a major decline in water quality in some of the streams studied.  相似文献   

12.
To investigate climatic influence on floodplain trees, we analysed interannual correspondences between the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), river and groundwater hydrology, and growth and wood 13C discrimination (Δ13C) of narrowleaf cottonwoods (Populus angustifolia) in a semi‐arid prairie region. From the Rocky Mountain headwaters, river discharge (Q) was coordinated with the PDO (1910–2008: r2 = 0.46); this pattern extended to the prairie and was amplified by water withdrawal for irrigation. Floodplain groundwater depth was correlated with river stage (r2 = 0.96), and the cottonwood trunk basal area growth was coordinated with current‐ and prior‐year Q (1992–2008: r2 = 0.51), increasing in the mid‐1990s, and decreasing in 2000 and 2001. Annual Δ13C decreased during low‐flow years, especially in trees that were higher or further from the river, suggesting drought stress and stomatal closure, and male trees were more responsive than females (?0.86 versus ?0.43‰). With subsequently increased flows, Δ13C increased and growth recovered. This demonstrated the linkages between hydroclimatic variation and cottonwood ecophysiology, and we conclude that cottonwoods will be vulnerable to drought from declining river flows due to water withdrawal and climate change. Trees further from the river could be especially affected, leading to narrowing of floodplain forests along some rivers.  相似文献   

13.
Riparian tree planting is widely recognised as a means to improve water quality and stream habitat. However, shading of riparian pasture grasses can lead to channel widening, and riparian shade may limit the growth of macrophytes and algae that assimilate dissolved nutrients from the water column. We investigated concerns that riparian management could lead to increased yields of nutrients and sediments through a conceptual modelling exercise. A simple model of the trade-off between interception of nutrients in runoff by forest buffers versus reduction of in-stream uptake due to shade, predicted that a buffer strip alongside a small headwater stream would reduce nutrient export, while a buffer strip instigated as an isolated patch alongside a larger stream (c. >2.5 km2 upstream catchment size) would increase nutrient export, as the relative amount of nutrients trapped by the buffer decreases as the nutrient load present in the stream water increases. However, in these larger streams with width exceeding approximately 6 m, sufficient light may reach the streambed for plant and algal growth, which in turn would promote instream nutrient processing. At the peak of streambank erosion after planting, predicted total sediment yield (hillslope plus bank sources) was appreciably higher than the hillslope pasture yield, but sediment yield stabilised c. 35–40 years after planting. When planting was extended over 40 years in the model, the sediment yield never exceeded that in pasture before planting. This conceptual modelling exercise shows that riparian tree planting programmes should commence in the headwaters and progress downstream to avoid nutrient yield increases. Significant sediment yield from bank stored sediment of small streams can be expected until the channel reaches the more stable, original forested width, but progressive planting may decrease the peak loads of sediment.  相似文献   

14.
We examined the effect of sustained stream bank seepage during base flow conditions on the pore water nitrogen biogeochemistry of two riparian zones in lowland agricultural areas in southern Ontario, Canada. Nitrate, ammonium and dissolved oxygen concentrations in riparian subsurface water over a two-year period showed well-organized spatial patterns along stream bank seepage flow paths that extended seasonally up to 25 m inland. High levels of dissolved oxygen and NO3 in stream inflow were depleted rapidly at the stream bank interface suggesting the occurrence of aerobic microbial respiration followed by denitrification. A zone of NH4+ accumulation persisted in more anaerobic sediments inland from the bank margin, although the magnitude and intensity of the pattern varied seasonally. A bromide tracer and NO3 co-injection at the stream bank interface indicated that bank seepage occurred along preferential flow paths in a poorly sorted gravel layer in the two riparian zones. Depletion of NO3 in relation to co-injected bromide confirmed that the bank margin was a hot spot of biogeochemical activity within the riparian zone. Conceptual models of humid temperate riparian zones have focused on nitrogen biogeochemistry in relation to hillslope to stream hydrologic flow paths. However, our results suggest that sustained stream bank inflow during low flow conditions can exert a dominant control on riparian nitrogen cycling in lowland landscapes where level riparian zones bounded by perennial streams receive limited subsurface inflows from adjacent slopes.  相似文献   

15.
Species distribution models (SDMs) in river ecosystems can incorporate climate information by using air temperature and precipitation as surrogate measures of instream conditions or by using independent models of water temperature and hydrology to link climate to instream habitat. The latter approach is preferable but constrained by the logistical burden of developing water temperature and hydrology models. We therefore assessed whether regional scale, freshwater SDM predictions are fundamentally different when climate data versus instream temperature and hydrology are used as covariates. Maximum entropy (MaxEnt) SDMs were built for 15 freshwater fishes using one of two covariate sets: 1) air temperature and precipitation (climate variables) in combination with physical habitat variables; or 2) water temperature, hydrology (instream variables) and physical habitat. Three procedures were then used to compare results from climate vs instream models. First, equivalence tests assessed average pairwise differences (site‐specific comparisons throughout each species’ range) among climate and instream models. Second, ‘congruence’ tests determined how often the same stream segments were assigned high habitat suitability by climate and instream models. Third, Schoener's D and Warren's I niche overlap statistics quantified range‐wide similarity in predicted habitat suitability from climate vs instream models. Equivalence tests revealed small, pairwise differences in habitat suitability between climate and instream models (mean pairwise differences in MaxEnt raw scores for all species < 3 × 10–4). Congruence tests showed a strong tendency for climate and instream models to predict high habitat suitability at the same stream segments (median congruence = 68%). D and I statistics reflected a high margin of overlap among climate and instream models (median D = 0.78, median I = 0.96). Overall, we found little support for the hypothesis that SDM predictions are fundamentally different when climate versus instream covariates are used to model fish species’ distributions at the scale of the Columbia Basin.  相似文献   

16.
  1. Anadromous fish transport marine-derived nutrients to freshwaters during spawning migrations with potential implications for stream food webs. While many studies have explored the role of marine-derived nutrients instream ecosystems (particularly via Pacific salmonids [Oncorhynchus spp.]), relatively few have examined the spatial distribution and patchiness of non-salmonid fish carcasses or rates of transport to the riparian zone.
  2. We radio-tagged and released 144 mature Pacific lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus) prior to spawning and tracked the fate of post-spawn carcasses in two inland Columbia River basin streams to characterise spatial distribution of carcasses and marine-derived nutrient deposition. We found that 27 and 40% of lamprey that could be assigned a fate were moved into the riparian zone adjacent to stream segments exhibiting higher velocity conditions with larger substrates. Conversely, lamprey with instream fates were associated with depositional microhabitats and woody debris dams. Estimated carcass loading rates varied by more than an order of magnitude among habitats. These patterns probably reflect a combination of processes influencing the likelihood of carcass removal (e.g. by predators or scavengers, or stranding) and factors affecting the distribution of carcasses remaining within the stream.
  3. Our results demonstrate substantial transport of lamprey carcasses across the stream-riparian ecotone and a non-random distribution of carcasses within streams, patterns which probably influence how resources enter stream and riparian food webs. More broadly, the results suggest local and landscape-scale hydrogeomorphic factors, along with species-specific traits and phenology, affect the distribution and potential roles of fish carrion in stream food webs.
  相似文献   

17.
Variations of predawn and midday leaf water potential and relative growth rates were studied in mature carob trees (Ceratonia siliqua L. cv Mulata) submitted to a fertigation experiment. Three levels of irrigation were tested: 0%, 50% and 100%, based on daily standard evaporation values. For each irrigation level two nitrogen amounts were applied –21 and 63 kg N ha-1 year-1 as ammonium nitrate. The experiment was run between July 91 and August 1993. Measurements of leaf water potential and absolute branch length increments were made at monthly intervals, during the entire experimental period or during seasonal growth, respectively. Leaf water potential was related to soil volumetric water content, maximum and minimum air temperature and daily evaporation. Predawn leaf water potentials were always higher than –1.1 MPa. Midday leaf water potential values presented very large seasonal variations and very low values independent of treatments. The low leaf water potentials observed for the fertigated trees during summer, suggest that this parameter may be related not only to the evaporative demand but also to growth investment. The amount of fertigation was positively correlated with vegetative growth increment and fruit production. Practical implications for irrigation schedules of leaf water potential patterns together with drought adaptation mechanisms of carob tree are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Climate response among growth increments of fish and trees   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Significant correlations were found among the annual growth increments of stream fish, trees, and climate variables in the Ozark region of the United States. The variation in annual growth increments of rock bass (Ambloplites rupestris) from the Jacks Fork River was significantly correlated over 22 years with the ring width of four tree species: white oak (Quercus alba), post oak (Quercus stellata), shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata) and eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana). Rock bass growth and tree growth were both significantly correlated with July rainfall and stream discharge. Variations in annual growth of smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) from four streams were significantly correlated over 29 years (1939–1968) with mean May maximum air temperature but not with tree growth. The magnitude and significance of correlations among growth increments from fish and trees imply that conditions such as topography, stream gradient, organism age, and the distribution of a population relative to its geographic range can influence the climatic response of an organism. The timing and intensity of climatic variables may produce different responses among closely related species.  相似文献   

19.
Quantification of submerged wood in a lowland Australian stream system   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
1. The importance of submerged wood (snags) as macroinvertebrate habitat was evaluated in the Pranjip-Creightons Creek system, a lowland stream system in northern Victoria. Snag surface area and biomass were measured at ten sites along the system. The first four upstream sites, located in the foothills of the Strathbogie Ranges, and the next three sites, on the northern Victorian riverine plain, were affected by streambank erosion and high sediment loads and contained little instream wood. A further three sites (Sites 8, 9 and 10) downstream on the riverine plain were not as affected by erosion and possessed extensive stands of riparian river redgum, Eucalyptus camaldulensis, which contributed large amounts of wood to the stream channel. 2. Wood quantities at Site 8 were less than at Sites 9 and 10 downstream where the density of riparian redgum was greater. At Sites 9 and 10, snag surface area per m2 of stream bed was 0.57–0.92m2 and 0.38–0.71m2 depending on discharge. Total snag biomass in the stream channel at the same sites was 26 and 41kg m?2, respectively. Redgum was important to macroinvertebrates as habitat, at one site contributing 25% of total macroinvertebrate densities and over 30% of total macroinvertebrate biomass m?2 of stream bed. 3. Estimations of nitrogen content and C:N ratios of decayed redgum were carried out to provide information on its putative nutritional quality to xylophagous macroinvertebrates. Decayed redgum wood has a comparatively high N content and therefore a low C:N ratio, but appeared to be unpalatable to most macroinvertebrates. Only two macroinvertebrate species, the chironomid larvae Stenochironomus sp. and Dicrotendipes sp., were found to consume decayed redgum.  相似文献   

20.
Water and dissolved nitrogen flows through the hyporheic zone of a 3rd-order mountain stream in Hokkaido, northern Japan were measured during a small storm in August 1997. A network of wells was established to measure water table elevations and to collect water samples to analyze dissolved nitrogen concentrations. Hydraulic conductivity and the depth to bedrock were surveyed. We parameterized the groundwater flow model, MODFLOW, to quantify subsurface flows of both stream water and soil water through the hyporheic zone. MODFLOW simulations suggest that soil water inflow from the adjacent hill slope increased by 1.7-fold during a small storm. Dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) and ammonium (NH 4 + ) in soil water from the hill slope were the dominant nitrogen inputs to the riparian zone. DON was consumed via mineralization to NH 4 + in the hyporheic zone. NH 4 + was the dominant nitrogen species in the subsurface, and showed a net release during both base and storm flow. Nitrate appeared to be lost to denitrification or immobilized by microorganisms and/or vegetation in the riparian zone. Our results indicated that the riparian and hyporheic system was a net source of NH 4 + to the stream.  相似文献   

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