Reintroduced Beavers Rapidly Influence the Storage and Biogeochemistry of Sediments in Headwater Streams (Methow River, Washington)

IF 0.5 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ECOLOGY Northwest Science Pub Date : 2019-09-25 DOI:10.3955/046.093.0203
Rita K. McCreesh, K. Fox-Dobbs, P. Wimberger, Kent Woodruff, G. Holtgrieve, Thomas Pool
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract North American beavers (Castor canadensis) were targeted within North American headwater landscapes by European loggers and fur traders in the 19th century, reducing beaver populations to near extinction by 1900. The extirpation of beavers from river networks has had profound effects on riparian zones, including channel geomorphology, temperature regimes, sediment storage, channel-floodplain connectivity, carbon storage and nutrient dynamics. Consequently, reintroducing beavers has been provisionally implemented as a restoration approach within some watersheds. We characterized how reintroduced beavers influence the short-term dynamics of organic material accumulation within the sediments of 1st and 2nd order streams within the Methow River watershed of Washington State. In collaboration with the Methow Beaver Project, we identified four creeks where they had reintroduced beavers within the past five years, as well as a control non-beaver pond. At each site, we collected shallow sediment cores from upstream, downstream, and within beaver ponds, and then measured organic material via elemental analyses of sediment carbon (%C) and nitrogen (%N) content. We compared those samples to sediments accumulated in local pond areas not created by beaver activity. Our results show greater organic C and N content of sediments in beaver ponds than non-beaver ponds. C/N ratios indicate elevated accumulation of allochthonous organic material in beaver impoundment sediments that would otherwise not be integrated into headwater streams from the terrestrial landscape. These findings suggest that the reintroduction of beavers could be an effective means to promote restoration of whole ecosystem function.
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重新引入的海狸会迅速影响源头溪流沉积物的储存和生物地球化学(Methow River,Washington)
摘要19世纪,北美海狸(加拿大海狸)在北美水源地成为欧洲伐木工人和毛皮贸易商的目标,到1900年,海狸的数量几乎灭绝。河网中海狸的灭绝对河岸带产生了深远的影响,包括河道地貌、温度状况、沉积物储存、河道-泛滥平原连通性、碳储存和营养动态。因此,在一些流域内,作为一种恢复方法,重新引入海狸已被暂时实施。我们描述了重新引入的海狸如何影响华盛顿州Methow河流域一级和二级河流沉积物中有机物质积累的短期动态。在与Methow Beaver项目的合作下,我们确定了过去五年中他们重新引入海狸的四条小溪,以及一个对照非海狸池塘。在每个地点,我们收集了上游、下游和河狸池内的浅层沉积物岩芯,然后通过沉积物碳(%C)和氮(%N)含量的元素分析来测量有机物质。我们将这些样本与当地池塘区域积累的沉积物进行了比较,这些沉积物不是由海狸活动产生的。我们的研究结果表明,河狸池塘沉积物中的有机碳和氮含量高于非河狸池塘。C/N比率表明,海狸蓄水沉积物中外来有机物质的积累增加,否则这些物质将不会从陆地景观中整合到源头溪流中。这些发现表明,重新引入海狸可能是促进整个生态系统功能恢复的有效手段。
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来源期刊
Northwest Science
Northwest Science 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The pages of Northwest Science are open to original and fundamental research in the basic, applied, and social sciences. All submissions are refereed by at least two qualified peer reviewers. Papers are welcome from authors outside of the Pacific Northwest if the topic is suitable to our regional audience.
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