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National Monitoring Conference May 7-11, 2006

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1 National Monitoring Conference May 7-11, 2006
Effects of Hydrologic and Environmental Factors on Ecological Conditions of Upland Streams in the Northeast, USA. National Monitoring Conference May 7-11, 2006 Jonathan G. Kennen, NJWSC, West Trenton, NJ Karen R. Murray NYWSC, Troy, NY Karen M. Beaulieu, CTWSC, East Hartford, CT

2 There are many mechanisms by which hydrology impacts biota.
Requirements Stressors Sources High Water Temperature Poor Riparian Buffers Poor Riparian Buffers Healthy Water Chemical Pollutants Point Sources High Turbidity Construction Substrate Suitability (low DO) Sedimentation Channel Erosion Refugia Physical Habitat Insuf. Woody Debris Historic Sediment Interstitial Habitat Impervious Surfaces/ Stormwater Altered Flows (algal bloom) Excess Nutrients Livestock & Poultry Use of Pesticides & Fertilizers Altered Food Webs Food (Algae, Meiofauna) Invasive Species Introductions Excess Competitors Few Competitors & Predators Excess Predators Reservoirs Connections to Other Populations Road Crossings J. Kennen, NJWSC, West Trenton, NJ Movement Barriers

3 Multiple stressors can have additive and/or synergistic effects
? + x

4 Stream hydrology differs – can have linear, threshold, or even a delayed response to disturbance
? biotic integrity disturbance ? biotic integrity disturbance

5 “I asked you a question buddy, what’s the minimum flow we need to protect aquatic species in this here Basin?”

6 Project Objectives Identify important environmental and hydrological parameters Discern disturbance gradient from biota Describe relations with observed ecological patterns Use sound science to identify key variables water managers can use to improve stream quality

7 Scope 77 upland watersheds Range of urban intensity
7 NAWQA study units

8 Data Requirements Quantitative invertebrate riffle samples
Gaging station co-located at or near aquatic invertebrate sampling site Hydrologic data needed for a minimum of 3 or more years Quantitative invertebrate riffle samples Gaging station co-located at or near aquatic invertebrate sampling site Hydrologic data needed for a minimum of 3 or more years Quantitative invertebrate riffle samples Gaging station co-located at or near aquatic invertebrate sampling site Hydrologic data needed for a minimum of 3 or more years

9 Data Compilation Hydrologic descriptors (Hydrological Integrity Assessment Process –171 Variables) Quantitative invertebrate (density –numbers/m2) Assemblage metrics and indices GIS Data –“Roads Corrected” Land use / cover, etc.

10 General Analytical Approach
Environmental Variables PCA/Corr. [=data reduction] Final Set of Variables (Standardize, Transform, Assess Colliniarity) (>527 vars.) (76 vars.) Invertebrate Data Ordination (NMDS) Extract Axis Scores Multiple Linear Regression (MLR) (Axis Score = disturbance gradient) (+/- 37 vars.)

11 Why use Ordination? Reduces complexity of community data while retaining structure Derives environmental gradients based on biota Places sites with similar communities close together, those with dissimilar communities far apart

12 Disturbance Gradient Concept
Excellent High Ecosystem Integrity Very Good Good Assemblage Condition Fair Poor Low Ecosystem Integrity Very Poor Natural Minimal Moderate High Serious Radical Anthropogenic Disturbance

13 Distribution of Sites Coded by Relative Position Along the Disturbance Gradient
Level of Disturbance High Moderate Minimum Very High NE Ecoregions

14 Ordination Color Coded (high to low) by Percent Riparian Forest
% Rip. Forest Low Medium High Disturbance Gradient

15 Relations with assemblage structure and function
Richness of Sensitive EPT Taxa Dist. Grad. Dist. Grad. Richness of Tolerant Taxa Strong relations with metrics further support interpretation as a disturbance gradient.

16 Relations with Land Use & Configuration
Decline in Core Forest Dist. Grad. Relations show the extent of anthropogenic effects and help target attributes that may be useful from a LU planning perspective. Decline in % Riparian Forest Dist. Grad.

17 Relations with assemblage structure
Tolerant species increase Sensitive species decrease

18 Regression Model using Disturbance Gradient as Response Variable
Results of significant (p<0.05) MLR model –disturbance gradient is response variable

19 Example –Percent Riparian Forest
EPT Richness Significant linear relations observed –no defined inflection point. % of Omnivores Variability of January Flow

20 Summary of Findings Patterns in biota are highly related to stream degradation. Environmental alterations are related to changes in the biotic integrity across a disturbance gradient. Riparian forest areas lessen the effects of human-induced landscape and hydrologic alterations. Intolerant taxa become less prevalent as streams become more degraded.

21 Management Implications
Relations between invertebrate assemblage metrics and environmental and flow attributes can be used to: target levels of riparian coverage that are protective of structural complexity and/or meet designated aquatic life use or. . target portions of the flow regime that are protective of biological integrity

22 Management Implications


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