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The influence of climate change and restoration on stream temperature

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title The influence of climate change and restoration on stream temperature
Names Diabat, Mousa (creator)
Haggerty, Roy (advisor)
Wondzell, Steven M. (advisor)
Date Issued 2014-05-14 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2014
Abstract Water temperature is an essential property of a stream. Temperature regulates
physical and biochemical processes in aquatic habitats. Various factors related to
climatic conditions, landscape characteristics, and channel structure directly influence
stream temperature. Numerous studies indicate that increased average air temperature
during the past century has led to stream warming across the world. The trend of
stream warming was also present in spring-fed watersheds, where summer flow has
decreased. In addition, anthropogenic practices that alter the natural landscape and
channel structure, such as forest management, agriculture, and mining contributed to
stream warming. For example, deforested and unshaded stream reaches or dredged
channels were warmer than shaded reaches and meandering streams. Stream
temperatures in North American lotic habitats are of a specific concern due to their
significant economic, cultural, and ecological value. With climate projections
indicating that air temperature will only continue to rise throughout the 21st century,
cold- or cool-water organisms, especially fishes, will be affected. Therefore, there is a
strong need to better understand the impacts of changing climate, riparian landscape,
and channel structure on a stream's heat budget. This may assist in restoring the
historic thermal regime in impacted sites and mitigating the impacts of future climate
change.
This study looks into the relative influences of the different factors on a stream's heat
budget with three manuscripts: one on stream temperature response to diel timing of
air warming, one on stream temperature response to changes in air temperature, flow,
and riparian vegetation, and one on stream temperature response to air warming and
channel reconstruction. I used the software Heat Source version 8.05 to simulate
stream temperature for all three analyses along the Middle Fork John Day River,
Oregon USA. Two of the manuscripts were applied to an upper 37 km section of the
Middle Fork John Day River (presented in chapter 2 and 3), where the third
manuscript was applied to a 1.5-km section.

The sensitivity analysis of stream temperature response to diel timing of air warming
(Chapter 2: Diel Timing of Warmer Air under Climate Change Affects Magnitude,
Timing, and Duration of Stream Temperature Change) was based on scenarios
representing uniform air warming over the diel period, daytime warming, and
nighttime warming. Uniform warming of air temperature is a simple representation of
increases in the average daily or monthly temperatures generated by the 'delta
method'. The delta method relies on adding a constant value to the air temperature
time-series data. This constant value is the difference (delta) between base case
average air temperatures and the projected one. Scenarios of daytime or nighttime
warming represent conditions under which most of the warming of the air occurs
during the daytime or the nighttime, respectively. I simulated the stream temperature
response to warmer air conditions of +2 °C and +4 °C in daily average for all three
cases of air warming conditions. The three cases of different diel distributions of air
warming generated 7-day average daily maximum stream temperature (7DADM)
increases of approximately +1.8 °C ± 0.1 °C at the downstream end of the study
section relative to the base case. In most parts of the reach, the three distributions of
air warming generated different ranges of stream temperatures, different 7DADM
values, different durations of stream temperature changes, and different average daily
temperatures. Changes of stream temperature were out of phase with imposed
changes of air temperature. Therefore, nighttime warming of air temperatures would
cause the greatest increase in maximum daily stream temperature, which typically
occurs during the daytime.

The sensitivity analysis of the relative influences of changes in air temperature,
stream flow, and riparian vegetation on stream temperature (Chapter 3: Assessing
Stream Temperature Response to Cumulative Influence of Changing Air
Temperature, Flow, and Riparian Vegetation). This study summarized stream
temperature simulation in 36 scenarios representing possible manifestations of 21st
century climate conditions and land management strategies. In addition to existing
conditions (base case) of flow, air temperature, and riparian vegetation, scenarios
consisted of: two air temperature increases of 2 °C and 4 °C, two stream flow
variations of +30% and -30%, three spatially uniform riparian vegetation conditions
that create averages of effective shade 7%, 34%, and 79%, in addition to 14% for
base case conditions. Results suggest that variation in riparian vegetation was the
dominant factor influencing stream temperature because it regulates incoming
shortwave radiation, the largest heat input to the stream, while variation in stream
flow has a negligible influence. Results indicated that increasing the effective shade
along the study section, particularly in the currently unshaded sections, could mitigate
the influence of increasing air temperature, and would reduce stream temperature
maxima below current values even under future climate conditions of warmer air.
With the small influence it had, increasing stream flow reduced the 7DADM under
low shade conditions. However, increasing stream flow showed counterintuitive
results as it contributed to increasing stream temperature maxima when the stream
was heavily shaded.

The applied study examined the stream temperature response to restoration practices
and their potential to mitigate the influence of warmer air conditions (Chapter 4:
Estimating Stream Temperature Response to Restoring Channel and Riparian
Vegetation and the Potential to Mitigate Warmer Air Conditions). This study focused
on a 1.5 km section along the upper part of the Middle Fork John Day River that was
modified due to past anthropogenic activities of mining for gold and timber harvest.
Currently, the riparian vegetation of the study site is mostly shrubs and stands of short
trees. Restoration designs call for the restoration of both the channel structure and
replanting the riparian vegetation. Simulation results showed that the 7DADM was
higher in the restored channel than the existing channel with both conditions of low
and high effective shade conditions. However, a combined restoration practice of
channel reconstruction and medium effective shade conditions reduced stream
temperature maxima more than restoring riparian vegetation alone. In addition, results
showed that restoring riparian vegetation was sufficient to mitigate the influence of
warmer air on stream temperature, while restoring the channel alone is not. Heat
budget analysis showed that heat accumulation during the daytime increased in the
restored channel, which was longer, narrower, and deeper than the existing channel.
It is important to emphasize that stream temperature is one of many goals that
restoration activities aim to improve. Furthermore, differences in 7DADM among the
different scenarios of restoration are negligible. Such small differences could hardly
be measure. While this study examined a short section of 1.5 km, longer stream
sections may increase the differences in 7DADM.

Primary conclusions of this study are: 1) daily maxima of stream temperature will
increase in response to increased air temperature regardless of the distribution of air
warming during the diel cycle; 2) nighttime air warming caused a greater increase in
stream temperature maximum than daytime warming; 3) riparian vegetation was the
dominant factor on stream's heat budget, more than air temperature or stream flow; 4)
restoring riparian vegetation mitigated the influence of warmer air; 5) restoring
channel structure alone was not sufficient to lower temperature maxima; and 6)
restoration project was most successful in improving degraded stream temperature
when combined with channel reconstruction and improved riparian shade.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Water temperature -- Oregon -- John Day River, Middle Fork -- Computer simulation
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/49288

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