Source and fate of dissolved organic matter in boreal headwater streams

Abstract

Understanding the source and fate of dissolved organic matter (DOM), a key water quality variable, in boreal headwaters is of critical importance considering the amount of carbon stored and processed in different ecosystem components within the boreal forest and the sensitivity of these processes to climate change. Using historical streamflow and stream chemistry data in combination with direct measurements of the landscape sources of DOM and more detailed stream DOM quality data from 2021 at the IISD-ELA, I examined how the terrestrial source of DOM influences the quantity and quality of DOM in three boreal headwater streams. Using historical stream data from 1981-2021, I found that concentration-discharge (c-Q) relationships varied based on both catchment characteristics and hydrological conditions. Streams draining upland-dominated catchments were more often transport-limited (i.e., concentration increased with increasing flow), whereas a wetland-dominated stream was more often source-limited (i.e., concentration decreased with increasing flow) in terms of stream DOM concentration. DOM concentration and quality data in soil leachate indicated that streamwater had DOM characteristics suggesting it originated from near-stream organic soils, while after the drought the DOM came proportionally more from distal mineral soils (in addition to near-stream organic soil contributions). I showed that the severe drought in 2021 made streams with varying landscape characteristics respond similarly to the post-drought flush. These findings also illustrate that while c-Q relationships may be different among streams draining upland-dominated and wetland-dominated catchments as a result of the different abilities of these landscape to accumulate and mobilize DOM, DOM quality responded to this drought to post-drought flush synchronously among all three streams. As climate change will alter the frequency, duration, and severity of future hydrological conditions, this has repercussions for the DOM dynamics in headwater streams and the resulting water quality downstream."I was supported in this research by a UWGSS Scholarship from UWinnipeg and an NSERc - Canada Graduate Scholarship."Master of Science in Bioscience, Technology and Public Polic

Similar works

This paper was published in WinnSpace Repository.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.

Licence: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess