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Wetlands | 2004

The wetland continuum: A conceptual framework for interpreting biological studies

Ned H. Euliss; James W. LaBaugh; Leigh H. Fredrickson; David M. Mushet; Murray K. Laubhan; George A. Swanson; Thomas C. Winter; Donald O. Rosenberry; Richard D. Nelson

We describe a conceptual model, the wetland continuum, which allows wetland managers, scientists, and ecologists to consider simultaneously the influence of climate and hydrologic setting on wetland biological communities. Although multidimensional, the wetland continuum is most easily represented as a two-dimensional gradient, with ground water and atmospheric water constituting the horizontal and vertical axes, respectively. By locating the position of a wetland on both axes of the continuum, the potential biological expression of the wetland can be predicted at any point in time. The model provides a framework useful in the organization and interpretation of biological data from wetlands by incorporating the dynamic changes these systems undergo as a result of normal climatic variation rather than placing them into static categories common to many wetland classification systems. While we developed this model from the literature available for depressional wetlands in the prairie pothole region of North America, we believe the concept has application to wetlands in many other geographic locations.


Wetlands | 2003

Hydrologic considerations in defining isolated wetlands

Thomas C. Winter; James W. LaBaugh

Wetlands that are not connected by streams to other surface-water bodies are considered to be isolated. Although the definition is based on surface-water connections to other water bodies, isolated wetlands commonly are integral parts of extensive ground-water flow systems, and isolated wetlands can spill over their surface divides into adjacent surface-water bodies during periods of abundant precipitation and high water levels. Thus, characteristics of ground-water flow and atmospheric-water flow affect the isolation of wetlands. In general, the degree that isolated wetlands are connected through the ground-water system to other surface-water bodies depends to a large extent on the rate that ground water moves and the rate that hydrologic stresses can be transmitted through the ground-water system. Water that seeps from an isolated wetland into a gravel aquifer can travel many kilometers through the ground-water system in one year. In contrast, water that seeps from an isolated wetland into a clayey or silty substrate may travel less than one meter in one year. For wetlands that can spill over their surface watersheds during periods of wet climate conditions, their isolation is related to the height to a spill elevation above normal wetland water level and the recurrence interval of various magnitudes of precipitation. The concepts presented in this paper indicate that the entire hydrologic system needs to be considered in establishing a definition of hydrologic isolation.


Water Resources Research | 1997

Hydrological and chemical estimates of the water balance of a closed-basin lake in north central Minnesota

James W. LaBaugh; Thomas C. Winter; Donald O. Rosenberry; Paul F. Schuster; Michael M. Reddy; George R. Aiken

Chemical mass balances for sodium, magnesium, chloride, dissolved organic carbon, and oxygen 18 were used to estimate groundwater seepage to and from Williams Lake, Minnesota, over a 15-month period, from April 1991 through June 1992. Groundwater seepage to the lake and seepage from the lake to groundwater were determined independently using a flow net approach using data from water table wells installed as part of the study. Hydrogeological analysis indicated groundwater seepage to the lake accounted for 74% of annual water input to the lake; the remainder came from atmospheric precipitation, as determined from a gage in the watershed and from nearby National Weather Service gages. Seepage from the lake accounted for 69% of annual water losses from the lake; the remainder was removed by evaporation, as determined by the energy budget method. Calculated annual water loss exceeded calculated annual water gain, and this imbalance was double the value of the independently measured decrease in lake volume. Seepage to the lake determined from oxygen 18 was larger (79% of annual water input) than that determined from the flow net approach and made the difference between calculated annual water gain and loss consistent with the independently measured decrease in lake volume. Although the net difference between volume of seepage to the lake and volume of seepage from the lake was 1% of average lake volume, movement of water into and out of the lake by seepage represented an annual exchange of groundwater with the lake equal to 26–27% of lake volume. Estimates of seepage to the lake from sodium, magnesium, chloride, and dissolved organic carbon did not agree with the values determined from flow net approach or oxygen 18. These results indicated the importance of using a combination of hydrogeological and chemical approaches to define volume of seepage to and from Williams Lake and identify uncertainties in chemical fluxes.


Climatic Change | 2017

Evidence for a climate-induced ecohydrological state shift in wetland ecosystems of the southern Prairie Pothole Region

Owen P. McKenna; David M. Mushet; Donald O. Rosenberry; James W. LaBaugh

Changing magnitude, frequency, and timing of precipitation can influence aquatic-system hydrological, geochemical, and biological processes, in some cases resulting in system-wide shifts to an alternate state. Since the early 1990s, the southern Prairie Pothole Region has been subjected to an extended period of increased wetness resulting in marked changes to aquatic systems defining this region. We explored numerous lines of evidence to identify: (1) how the recent wet period compared to historical variability, (2) hydrological, geochemical, and biological responses, and (3) how these responses might represent a state shift in the region’s wetland ecosystems. We analyzed long-term climate records and compared how different hydrological variables responded in this wet period compared to decades before the observed shift. Additionally, we used multi-decadal records of waterfowl population and subsurface tile drain records to explore wildlife and human responses to a shifting climate. Since 1993, a novel precipitation regime corresponded with increased pond numbers, ponded-water depths, lake levels, stream flows, groundwater heights, soil-moisture, waterfowl populations, and installation of subsurface tile drains in agricultural fields. These observed changes reflect an alteration in water storage and movement across the landscape that in turn has altered solute sources and concentrations of prairie-pothole wetlands and has increased pond permanence. Combined, these changes represent significant evidence for a state shift in the ecohydrological functioning of the region’s wetland ecosystems, a shift that may require a significant refinement of the previously developed “wetland continuum” concept.


Wetlands | 2018

Accommodating State Shifts within the Conceptual Framework of the Wetland Continuum

David M. Mushet; Owen P. McKenna; James W. LaBaugh; Ned H. Euliss; Donald O. Rosenberry

The Wetland Continuum is a conceptual framework that facilitates the interpretation of biological studies of wetland ecosystems. Recently summarized evidence documenting how a multi-decadal wet period has influenced aspects of wetland, lake and stream systems in the southern prairie-pothole region of North America has revealed the potential for wetlands to shift among alternate states. We propose that incorporation of state shifts into the Wetland Continuum, as originally proposed or as modified by Hayashi et al., is a relatively simple matter if one allows for shifts of wetlands along the horizontal, groundwater axis of the framework under conditions of extreme and sustained wet or dry conditions. We suggest that the ease by which state shifts can be accommodated within both the original and modified frameworks of the Wetland Continuum is a testament to the robustness of the concept when it is related to the alternative-stable-state concept.


Archive | 2017

Cottonwood Lake Study Area - Water Chemistry - Wetlands

David M. Mushet; James W. LaBaugh; Richard D. Nelson; Ned H. Euliss

This dataset contains water chemistry information for wetlands at the Cottonwood Lake Study Area, Statesman County, North Dakota.


Archive | 2017

Cottonwood Lake Study Area - Water Chemistry - Wells - In Situ Measurements

David M. Mushet; James W. LaBaugh

In situ specific conductance, pH, and temperature measurements from wells at the Cottonwood Lake Study Area, Statesman County, North Dakota, 1987 to 1995.


Science | 2002

Flow and Storage in Groundwater Systems

William M. Alley; Richard W. Healy; James W. LaBaugh; Thomas E. Reilly


Limnology and Oceanography | 1988

The design and use of a hydraulic potentiomanometer for direct measurement of differences in hydraulic head between groundwater and surface water

Thomas C. Winter; James W. LaBaugh; Donald O. Rosenberry


Journal of The American Water Resources Association | 1986

WETLAND ECOSYSTEM STUDIES FROM A HYDROLOGIC PERSPECTIVE.

James W. LaBaugh

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Donald O. Rosenberry

United States Geological Survey

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Thomas C. Winter

United States Geological Survey

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David M. Mushet

United States Geological Survey

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Ned H. Euliss

United States Geological Survey

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Richard D. Nelson

United States Bureau of Reclamation

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Christopher T. Mills

United States Geological Survey

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Martin B. Goldhaber

United States Geological Survey

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Michael M. Reddy

United States Geological Survey

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Paul F. Schuster

United States Geological Survey

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