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The effect of river pulsing on sedimentation and nutrients in created riparian wetlands
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The effect of river pulsing on sedimentation and nutrients in created riparian wetlands

Amanda M. Nahlik and William J. Mitsch
Journal of environmental quality, Vol.37(4), pp.1634-1643
08-2008
PMID: 18574197

Abstract

constructed wetlands environmental effects Environmental geology fluvial features fluvial sedimentation hydrology nutrients Ohio organic compounds pollutants pollution riparian environment rivers seasonal variations sedimentation steady flow surface water United States wetlands

Sedimentation under pulsed and steady-flow conditions was investigated in two created flow-through riparian wetlands in central Ohio over 2 yr. Hydrologic pulses of river water lasting for 6 to 8 d were imposed on each wetland from January through June during 2004. Mean inflow rates during pulses averaged 52 and 7 cm d(-1) between pulses. In 2005, the wetlands received a steady-flow regime of 11 cm d(-1) with no major hydrologic fluctuations. Thirty-two sediment traps were deployed and sampled once per month in April, May, June, and July for two consecutive years in each wetland. January through March were not sampled in either year due to frozen water surfaces in the wetlands. Gross sedimentation (sedimentation without normalizing for differences between years) was significantly greater in the pulsing study period (90 kg m(-2)) than in the steady-flow study period (64 kg m(-2)). When normalized for different hydrologic and total suspended solid inputs between years, sedimentation for April through July was not significantly different between pulsing and steadyflow study periods. Sedimentation for the 3 mo that received hydrologic pulses (April, May, and June) was significantly lower during pulsing months than in the corresponding steadyflow months. Large fractions of inorganic matter in collected sediments indicated that allochthonous inputs were the main contributor to sedimentation in these wetlands. Organic matter fractions of collected sediments were consistently greater in the steady-flow study period (1.8 g kg(-1)) than in the pulsed study period 0.5 g kg(-1)), consistent with greater primary productivity in the water column during steady-flow conditions.

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