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The influence of environmental and physical factors on the thermal patterns of headwater streams

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Field Value
Title The influence of environmental and physical factors on the thermal patterns of headwater streams
Names Carr, Craig A. (creator)
Stringham, Tamzen K. (advisor)
Date Issued 2003-06-12 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2004
Abstract A case study was performed in 2000 and 2001 to characterize the thermal
pattern of four morphologically similar eastern Oregon streams and to identify the
physical and environmental factors that expressed significant and functionally
viable relationships with stream temperature (daily maximum, daily minimum and
daily rate of heating). Stream and environmental attributes were measured at
various locations along each stream to provide a data set comprised of variables
representing daily stream temperatures (minimum, maximum and rates of heating),
daily air temperatures (minimum and maximum), shade, elevation, elevation
change and length. Data from the 20 hottest days were analyzed using analysis of
variance and regression-based path analysis.
With the exception of those reaches that were influenced by groundwater or
subsurface flow, downstream reaches consistently experienced increases in the
daily maximum stream temperature. The most significant parameter with respect
to daily maximum stream temperature appeared to be reach elevation; expressed
through reach location in the watershed. Maximum air temperature also positively influenced maximum stream temperature however, only on streams that expressed
significant variation in maximum air temperature. The dominant influence of
groundwater on maximum stream temperature was also apparent.
Significant reach level variation in daily minimum stream temperatures was
not observed in this study, however most streams did record increases in the
downstream direction. Daily minimum air temperature was consistent across all
streams in expressing the most significant relationship with daily minimum stream
temperature.
With the exception of groundwater influenced reaches, all streams exhibited
obvious downstream increases in the daily rate of stream heating. Daily minimum
air temperature consistently exhibited a significant negative association with the
rate of heating and a relationship was also implied between reach elevation,
maximum stream temperature and minimum stream temperature and this stream
temperature response. Groundwater and subsurface flow, when present, also
appeared to influence the daily rate of stream heating.
Resource management activities should have little impact on the parameters
found, on these streams, to be associated with stream temperature. Location in the
watershed and climatic influence through both minimum and maximum air
temperatures emerged as the dominant factors with respect to stream thermal
patterns.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Water temperature -- Oregon, Eastern
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/20071

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