Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow

Thesis advisor: Martha Carlson Mazur === Rivermouths are dynamic systems characterized by hydrologic mixing, where water, energy, sediment and nutrients from both river and receiving water unite to form a unique yet variable environment. Water levels in these environments are thus defined by, and su...

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Main Author: Prats, Kyra Alexandra
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3085
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1024962019-05-10T07:35:01Z Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow Prats, Kyra Alexandra Thesis advisor: Martha Carlson Mazur Text thesis 2013 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Rivermouths are dynamic systems characterized by hydrologic mixing, where water, energy, sediment and nutrients from both river and receiving water unite to form a unique yet variable environment. Water levels in these environments are thus defined by, and subject to, streamflow from the river and lake-level fluctuations. Long-term fluctuations in water levels affect hydrogeomorphic structure, as well as wetland structure, distribution, and composition. A better understanding of these dynamics will help us to comprehend the processes that govern changes in wetland area and, thus, the breadth of the ecosystem services that estuarine wetlands provide. To this end, this study examined how wetland plant communities have changed through time in relation to long-term changes in water levels from both river and lake systems, using historic aerial photograph interpretation in three rivermouths on Lake Michigan. Additionally, the observed patterns of historic water levels and streamflows were used to inform our predictions for the future in light of climate changes. Results showed that higher water levels and peak streamflows led to less wetland area; average streamflow did not play a statistically detectable role in rivermouths that had lake-dominated morphologies but was significant in the rivermouth system that was riverine dominated. This suggests that varying rivermouth morphologies respond differently to lake and stream dynamics. Restoration decisions that take rivermouth morphology into account will be important as these systems continue to change both naturally and due to climate or other anthropogenic disturbances. It is important to realize not only the extent to which humans are affecting rivermouth systems, but also the interplay between water levels, streamflows, hydrogeomorphology, and wetland ecology within these systems themselves, so as to better understand the necessary steps for restoration. rivermouths wetlands streamflow hydrogeomorphology lake levels Lake Michigan Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (BS) — Boston College, 2013. Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Geology & Geophysics Honors Program. Discipline: Earth and Environmental Science. 386114 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3085
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic rivermouths
wetlands
streamflow
hydrogeomorphology
lake levels
Lake Michigan
spellingShingle rivermouths
wetlands
streamflow
hydrogeomorphology
lake levels
Lake Michigan
Prats, Kyra Alexandra
Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
description Thesis advisor: Martha Carlson Mazur === Rivermouths are dynamic systems characterized by hydrologic mixing, where water, energy, sediment and nutrients from both river and receiving water unite to form a unique yet variable environment. Water levels in these environments are thus defined by, and subject to, streamflow from the river and lake-level fluctuations. Long-term fluctuations in water levels affect hydrogeomorphic structure, as well as wetland structure, distribution, and composition. A better understanding of these dynamics will help us to comprehend the processes that govern changes in wetland area and, thus, the breadth of the ecosystem services that estuarine wetlands provide. To this end, this study examined how wetland plant communities have changed through time in relation to long-term changes in water levels from both river and lake systems, using historic aerial photograph interpretation in three rivermouths on Lake Michigan. Additionally, the observed patterns of historic water levels and streamflows were used to inform our predictions for the future in light of climate changes. Results showed that higher water levels and peak streamflows led to less wetland area; average streamflow did not play a statistically detectable role in rivermouths that had lake-dominated morphologies but was significant in the rivermouth system that was riverine dominated. This suggests that varying rivermouth morphologies respond differently to lake and stream dynamics. Restoration decisions that take rivermouth morphology into account will be important as these systems continue to change both naturally and due to climate or other anthropogenic disturbances. It is important to realize not only the extent to which humans are affecting rivermouth systems, but also the interplay between water levels, streamflows, hydrogeomorphology, and wetland ecology within these systems themselves, so as to better understand the necessary steps for restoration. === Thesis (BS) — Boston College, 2013. === Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Geology & Geophysics Honors Program. === Discipline: Earth and Environmental Science.
author Prats, Kyra Alexandra
author_facet Prats, Kyra Alexandra
author_sort Prats, Kyra Alexandra
title Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
title_short Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
title_full Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
title_fullStr Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
title_full_unstemmed Rivermouth Ecosystem Hydrogeomorphology: Relationships Among Wetland Area, Water Levels, and Streamflow
title_sort rivermouth ecosystem hydrogeomorphology: relationships among wetland area, water levels, and streamflow
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3085
work_keys_str_mv AT pratskyraalexandra rivermouthecosystemhydrogeomorphologyrelationshipsamongwetlandareawaterlevelsandstreamflow
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