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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Effects of water level management on water chemistry and primary production of boreal marshes in northern Manitoba, Canada

Watchorn, Kristen Elise 31 January 2011 (has links)
This experiment manipulated water levels in boreal marshes within the Saskatchewan River Delta, a 9500 km2 region in northern Canada. Water levels in three wetland cells were lowered in a partial drawdown by a mean of 0.32 m. Water clarity, nutrient concentrations, and periphyton nutrient limitation were measured over the summer preceding and the summer following manipulation. The water levels of three adjacent control wetlands were not manipulated. Lowering wetland water levels reduced the wind velocity necessary to resuspend bottom sediments, which led to increases in turbidity, dissolved organic carbon, and concentrations of organic and inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus. Prior to drawdown, wetland periphyton communities were limited by nitrogen or co-limited by nitrogen and phosphorus. The input of nutrients from the sediment resulted in a shift from nutrient deficiency to nutrient sufficiency. Periphyton and phytoplankton production increased in response to the nutrient input. Increased turbidity, nutrient concentrations, and algal production were correlated with depth, rather than being inherent to the drawdown condition. Other water level manipulation studies have found that a reflood after a period of total drawdown caused a pulse of nutrients leaching from decomposing litter. This work suggests that these changes may not require complete drying out of sediments, or the input of large amounts of litter from drowned annual mudflat species, but rather can occur when depths are shallow enough that sediments are more frequently resuspended by wind. These findings have implications for future management of these marshes for waterfowl and muskrat production.
2

Effects of water level management on water chemistry and primary production of boreal marshes in northern Manitoba, Canada

Watchorn, Kristen Elise 31 January 2011 (has links)
This experiment manipulated water levels in boreal marshes within the Saskatchewan River Delta, a 9500 km2 region in northern Canada. Water levels in three wetland cells were lowered in a partial drawdown by a mean of 0.32 m. Water clarity, nutrient concentrations, and periphyton nutrient limitation were measured over the summer preceding and the summer following manipulation. The water levels of three adjacent control wetlands were not manipulated. Lowering wetland water levels reduced the wind velocity necessary to resuspend bottom sediments, which led to increases in turbidity, dissolved organic carbon, and concentrations of organic and inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus. Prior to drawdown, wetland periphyton communities were limited by nitrogen or co-limited by nitrogen and phosphorus. The input of nutrients from the sediment resulted in a shift from nutrient deficiency to nutrient sufficiency. Periphyton and phytoplankton production increased in response to the nutrient input. Increased turbidity, nutrient concentrations, and algal production were correlated with depth, rather than being inherent to the drawdown condition. Other water level manipulation studies have found that a reflood after a period of total drawdown caused a pulse of nutrients leaching from decomposing litter. This work suggests that these changes may not require complete drying out of sediments, or the input of large amounts of litter from drowned annual mudflat species, but rather can occur when depths are shallow enough that sediments are more frequently resuspended by wind. These findings have implications for future management of these marshes for waterfowl and muskrat production.

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