4.6 Article

Riparian Land Cover, Water Temperature Variability, and Thermal Stress for Aquatic Species in Urban Streams

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13192732

Keywords

tree canopy cover; water temperature; impervious surface; urban ecology; phenology

Funding

  1. USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station
  2. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Nature et Technologies (FRQNT)

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This study identified significant negative correlations between water temperature and percent tree canopy in the 5 m riparian area, and positive correlations between water temperature and total length of stormwater pipes. The mixed-effects models predicted that tree canopy cover in the riparian area would reduce water temperatures by 0.01 to 6°C, while the total length of stormwater pipes would increase water temperatures by 0.01 to 2.6°C.
Thermal regime warming and increased variability can result in human developed watersheds due to runoff over impervious surfaces and influence of stormwater pipes. This study quantified relationships between tree canopy, impervious surface, and water temperature in stream sites with 4 to 62% impervious land cover in their loggersheds to predict water temperature metrics relevant to aquatic species thermal stress thresholds. This study identified significant (& GE;0.7, p < 0.05) negative correlations between water temperature and percent tree canopy in the 5 m riparian area and positive correlations between water temperature and total length of stormwater pipe in the loggershed. Mixed-effects models predicted that tree canopy cover in the 5 m riparian area would reduce water temperatures 0.01 to 6 & DEG;C and total length of stormwater pipes in the loggershed would increase water temperatures 0.01 to 2.6 & DEG;C. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the relationship between stormwater pipes and water temperature metrics has been explored to better understand thermal dynamics in urban watersheds. The results highlight important aspects of thermal habitat quality and water temperature variability for aquatic species living in urban streams based on thermal thresholds relevant to species metabolism, growth, and life history.

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