Examination of aerial diatom flushing across watersheds in Luxembourg, Oregon and Slovakia for tracing episodic hydrological connectivity
- Title:
- Examination of aerial diatom flushing across watersheds in Luxembourg, Oregon and Slovakia for tracing episodic hydrological connectivity
- Creator:
- Pfister, Laurent, Wetzel, Carlos E., Martínez-Carreras, Núria, Iffly, Jean François, Klaus, Julian, Holko, Ladislav, and McDonnell, Jeffrey J.
- Identifier:
- https://cdk.lib.cas.cz/client/handle/uuid:cfc4b08d-045d-4f45-a5cf-db5cdeb1ec34
uuid:cfc4b08d-045d-4f45-a5cf-db5cdeb1ec34
doi:10.1515/johh-2015-0031 - Subject:
- aerial diatoms, hillslope-riparian zone-stream continuum, and hydrological connectivity
- Type:
- model:article and TEXT
- Format:
- bez média and svazek
- Description:
- Hydrological processes research remains a field that is severely measurement limited. While conventional tracers (geochemicals, isotopes) have brought extremely valuable insights into water source and flowpaths, they nonetheless have limitations that clearly constrain their range of application. Integrating hydrology and ecology in catchment science has been repeatedly advocated as offering potential for interdisciplinary studies that are eventually to provide a holistic view of catchment functioning. In this context, aerial diatoms have been shown to have the potential for detecting of the onset/cessation of rapid water flowpaths within the hillslope-riparian zone-stream continuum. However, many open questions prevail as to aerial diatom reservoir size, depletion and recovery, as well as to their mobilisation and transport processes. Moreover, aerial diatoms remain poorly known compared to freshwater species and new species are still being discovered. Here, we ask whether aerial diatom flushing can be observed in three catchments with contrasting physiographic characteristics in Luxembourg, Oregon (USA) and Slovakia. This is a prerequisite for qualifying aerial diatoms as a robust indicator of the onset/cessation of rapid water flowpaths across a wider range of physiographical contexts. One species in particular, (Hantzschia amphioxys (Ehr.) Grunow), was found to be common to the three investigated catchments. Aerial diatom species were flushed, in different relative proportions, to the river network during rainfall-runoff events in all three catchments. Our take-away message from this preliminary examination is that aerial diatoms appear to have a potential for tracing episodic hydrological connectivity through a wider range of physiographic contexts and therefore serve as a complementary tool to conventional hydrological tracers.
- Language:
- Slovak
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
policy:public - Coverage:
- 235-245
- Source:
- Journal of hydrology and hydromechanics | 2015 Volume:63 | Number:3
- Harvested from:
- CDK
- Metadata only:
- false
The item or associated files might be "in copyright"; review the provided rights metadata:
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
- policy:public