Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment

Wetland functions and conditions are determined by hydrologic, soil physiochemical, and biotic states. Information obtained from soil analysis can convey wetland history due to hydrologic regime, soil chemical changes, past physical disturbance, and past and current nutrient and pollutant levels. In...

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Main Author: Yellick, Alex Hach
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2017
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/26858
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-268582020-06-06T15:17:45Z Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment Yellick, Alex Hach Wetland functions and conditions are determined by hydrologic, soil physiochemical, and biotic states. Information obtained from soil analysis can convey wetland history due to hydrologic regime, soil chemical changes, past physical disturbance, and past and current nutrient and pollutant levels. In this research, multi-element fingerprinting was used to characterize the element composition of hydric soil. Specifically, fingerprints were used to characterize wetland characteristics across disturbance and hydrological gradients in the Prairie Pothole Region. This research has demonstrated that fingerprinting not only has the power to convey information regarding disturbance, but can be used to predict wetland water source (groundwater discharge, flow-through, and recharge). Furthermore, this research demonstrates how future wetland assessments might be strengthened through the incorporation of multi-element data from hydric soils. 2017-11-21T16:17:31Z 2017-11-21T16:17:31Z 2013 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/26858 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 application/pdf North Dakota State University
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format Others
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description Wetland functions and conditions are determined by hydrologic, soil physiochemical, and biotic states. Information obtained from soil analysis can convey wetland history due to hydrologic regime, soil chemical changes, past physical disturbance, and past and current nutrient and pollutant levels. In this research, multi-element fingerprinting was used to characterize the element composition of hydric soil. Specifically, fingerprints were used to characterize wetland characteristics across disturbance and hydrological gradients in the Prairie Pothole Region. This research has demonstrated that fingerprinting not only has the power to convey information regarding disturbance, but can be used to predict wetland water source (groundwater discharge, flow-through, and recharge). Furthermore, this research demonstrates how future wetland assessments might be strengthened through the incorporation of multi-element data from hydric soils.
author Yellick, Alex Hach
spellingShingle Yellick, Alex Hach
Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
author_facet Yellick, Alex Hach
author_sort Yellick, Alex Hach
title Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
title_short Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
title_full Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
title_fullStr Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Multi-Element Fingerprinting of Wetland Soil for Rapid Assessment
title_sort multi-element fingerprinting of wetland soil for rapid assessment
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/26858
work_keys_str_mv AT yellickalexhach multielementfingerprintingofwetlandsoilforrapidassessment
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