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Ecology | 2005

BIOGEOCHEMICAL AND METABOLIC RESPONSES TO THE FLOOD PULSE IN A SEMIARID FLOODPLAIN

H.M. Valett; Michelle Baker; John A. Morrice; Clifford S. Crawford; Manuel C. Molles; Clifford N. Dahm; D.L. Moyer; J. R. Thibault; Lisa M. Ellis

Flood pulse inundation of riparian forests alters rates of nutrient retention and organic matter processing in the aquatic ecosystems formed in the forest interior. Along the Middle Rio Grande (New Mexico, USA), impoundment and levee construction have created riparian forests that differ in their inter-flood intervals (IFIs) because some flood- plains are still regularly inundated by the flood pulse (i.e., connected), while other flood- plains remain isolated from flooding (i.e., disconnected). This research investigates how ecosystem responses to the flood pulse relate to forest IFI by quantifying nutrient and organic matter dynamics in the Rio Grande floodplain during three years of experimental flooding of the disconnected floodplain and during a single year of natural flooding of the connected floodplain. Surface and subsurface conditions in paired sites (control, flood) established in the two floodplain types were monitored to address metabolic and biogeochemical responses. Compared to dry controls, rates of respiration in the flooded sites increased by up to three orders of magnitude during the flood pulse. In the disconnected forest, month-long experimental floods produced widespread anoxia of four-week duration during each of the three years of flooding. In contrast, water in the connected floodplain remained well ox- ygenated (3-8 ppm). Material budgets for experimental floods showed the disconnected floodplain to be a sink for inorganic nitrogen and suspended solids, but a potential source of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Compared to the main stem of the Rio Grande, flood- water on the connected floodplain contained less nitrate, but comparable concentrations of DOC, phosphate-phosphorus, and ammonium-nitrogen. Results suggest that floodplain IFI drives metabolic and biogeochemical responses dur- ing the flood pulse. Impoundment and fragmentation have altered floodplains from a mosaic of patches with variable IFI to a bimodal distribution. Relatively predictable flooding occurs in the connected forest, while inundation of the disconnected forest occurs only as the result of managed application of water. In semiarid floodplains, water is scarce except during the flood pulse. Ecosystem responses to the flood pulse are related to the IFI and other measures of flooding history that help describe spatial variation in ecosystem function.


In: Aguirre-Bravo, C.; Pellicane, Patrick J.; Burns, Denver P.; and Draggan, Sidney, Eds. 2006. Monitoring Science and Technology Symposium: Unifying Knowledge for Sustainability in the Western Hemisphere Proceedings RMRS-P-42CD. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. p. 75-80 | 2006

Groundwater, Vegetation, and Atmosphere: Comparative Riparian Evapotranspiration, Restoration, and Water Salvage

James Cleverly; Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault; D. E. McDonnell; J. E. Allred Coonrod


Archive | 2016

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) from the Middle Rio Grande River Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011 ): Soil Thermal Flux, Temperature and Moisture Data

Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault


Archive | 2016

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) from the Middle Rio Grande River Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011 ): CO2 Concentration and Flux data

Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault


Archive | 2016

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) from the Middle Rio Grande River Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011): Energy Balance Data

Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault


Archive | 2016

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) from the Middle Rio Grande River Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011): Micrometeorological Data

J. R. Thibault; Clifford N. Dahm


Archive | 2015

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) along the Middle Rio Grande Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011 )

Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault


Archive | 2015

Riparian Evapotranspiration (ET) Study (SEON) from the Middle Rio Grande River Bosque, New Mexico (1999-2011 ): Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD) Data

Clifford N. Dahm; J. R. Thibault


Archive | 2015

Groundwater Well Data from the Middle Rio Grande Valley Riparian Zone, New Mexico (ongoing since 1999)

J. R. Thibault; Clifford N. Dahm


Archive | 2014

Groundwater Well Data from the Middle Rio Grande Riparian Zone (1999

J. R. Thibault; Clifford N. Dahm

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James R. Gosz

University of New Mexico

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Robert S. Bowman

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Zohrab Samani

New Mexico State University

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D.L. Moyer

University of New Mexico

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H.M. Valett

University of New Mexico

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