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A physical and chemical characterization of stream water draining three Oregon Coast Range catchments

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Title A physical and chemical characterization of stream water draining three Oregon Coast Range catchments
Names Hale, V. Cody (creator)
Schoenholtz, Stephen H (advisor)
Date Issued 2007-07-16T21:46:26Z (iso8601)
Internet Media Type application/pdf
Note Graduation date: 2008
Abstract Few studies have examined both long-term and fine-scale spatial variations in
water quality of small streams in the Pacific Northwest. As such, a case study was
conducted to determine if current physical and chemical properties of water in three
streams located in the Oregon Coast Range differed from historically measured
conditions, taking differences in past management regimes into account. In addition,
this research provides an assessment of spatial and temporal variability in nitratenitrogen
(N) concentrations and summer stream temperatures within each catchment.
The three research catchments were part of the Alsea Watershed Study (1959-
1973), where effects of forest management practices were examined using a pairedwatershed
study design. One catchment, Needle Branch, was clear-cut with no
protection provided to the stream. Harvesting in Needle Branch was followed by an
intense broadcast burn to remove logging slash. Another catchment, Deer Creek, was
patch-cut in three small units resulting in a 25% harvest of the total catchment area,
but buffers were retained along fish-bearing streams. The third catchment, Flynn
Creek, was used as a control.
In this revisit to the Alsea Watersheds, measurements were conducted
continuously (discharge, turbidity), intermittently (suspended sediments), and at
regular intervals (nitrate-N) for one year between October 2005 and September 2006.
Summertime stream temperature was also measured every half-hour from mid-June to
mid-September.
Comparisons of recent data with historic data show no detectable changes over
time for streamflow characteristics (annual runoff volume, peak flow discharges, and
number of low-flow days), annual sediment yield, or summer maximum stream
temperatures. Current nitrate-N export was similar to historically measured values for
Flynn Creek and Deer Creek; however, export at Needle Branch was increased over
past levels. This observation may be caused by dense colonization of the riparian area
with red alder (Alnus rubra), a N-fixing species, following the 1966 harvest. Patterns
of nitrate-N concentration varied throughout each catchment and are likely influenced
by the current distribution of red alder stands. Synoptically measured stream
temperatures were variable along each stream’s longitudinal profile. The ability to
meet Oregon’s water quality standard for temperature was dependent on measurement
location and method of analysis. Evaluating individual sampling points as discrete
records resulted in each stream exceeding the standard for at least one measurement
location, whereas evaluating the criteria based on the mean of all data collected within
the mainstem stream excluded Flynn Creek and Needle Branch from violation. These
results highlight the physical and chemical variability of stream water draining Oregon
Coast Range headwater catchments and provide insight as to where future work
should be focused to gain a more thorough understanding of these dynamic systems.
Genre Thesis
Topic Alsea Watershed Study
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/6007

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