Beaver pond biogeochemical effects in the Maryland Coastal Plain

Citation
Dl. Correll et al., Beaver pond biogeochemical effects in the Maryland Coastal Plain, BIOGEOCHEMI, 49(3), 2000, pp. 217-239
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
ISSN journal
01682563 → ACNP
Volume
49
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
217 - 239
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-2563(200006)49:3<217:BPBEIT>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
The fluxes and concentrations of materials from two contiguous second-order watersheds in the Coastal Plain of Maryland, U.S.A. were measured for six years prior to and six years subsequent to the formation of a 1.25 ha beave r pond near the bottom of one of the watersheds. The watersheds have a clay aquiclude and were equipped with V-notch weirs and continuous volume-integ rating water samplers. The beaver pond reduced annual discharge of water, t otal-N, total-P, dissolved silicate, TOC, and TSS by 8, 18, 21, 32, 28, and 27%, respectively. Most of the total-N reduction was due to increased rete ntion of nitrate in the winter and spring and TON in the winter and summer. Most of the total-P reduction was the result of retention of both TPi and TOP in the winter and summer. Dissolved silicate retention peaked in the sp ring, while TOC and TSS retention peaked in the winter. Prior to the format ion of the beaver pond, concentrations of TON, TPi, TOP, TOC, and TSS had h ighly significant correlations with stream discharge, especially in the win ter, but subsequent to the pond there was little or no relationship between these concentrations and stream discharge. However, concentrations of nitr ate in the spring and ammonium in the summer were highly correlated with st ream discharge both before and after the formation of the beaver pond and r egressions of discharge versus concentrations of these nutrients explained more of the variation in concentrations after the formation of the pond.