Riparian deforestation, stream narrowing, and loss of stream ecosystem services
University of Vermont · Stroud Water Research Center
Abstract
A study of 16 streams in eastern North America shows that riparian deforestation causes channel narrowing, which reduces the total amount of stream habitat and ecosystem per unit channel length and compromises in-stream processing of pollutants. Wide forest reaches had more macroinvertebrates, total ecosystem processing of organic matter, and nitrogen uptake per unit channel length than contiguous narrow deforested reaches. Stream narrowing nullified any potential advantages of deforestation regarding abundance of fish, quality of dissolved organic matter, and pesticide degradation. These findings show that forested stream channels have a wider and more natural configuration, which significantly affects the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
8- BWBernard W. SweeneyCorresponding
University of Vermont, Stroud Water Research Center
- TLThomas L. Bott
University of Vermont, Stroud Water Research Center
- JKJohn K. Jackson
University of Vermont, Stroud Water Research Center
- LALouis A. Kaplan
University of Vermont, Stroud Water Research Center
- JDJ. Denis Newbold
University of Vermont, Stroud Water Research Center
Topics & keywords
- Riparian zone
- Environmental science
- Deforestation (computer science)
- STREAMS
- Ecosystem
- Water quality
- Ecosystem services
- Nonpoint source pollution