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Dive into the research topics where Phillip J. Blaen is active.

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Featured researches published by Phillip J. Blaen.


Water Resources Research | 2016

Stream solute tracer timescales changing with discharge and reach length confound process interpretation

Noah M. Schmadel; Adam S. Ward; Marie J. Kurz; Jan H. Fleckenstein; Jay P. Zarnetske; David M. Hannah; Theresa Blume; Michael Vieweg; Phillip J. Blaen; Christian Schmidt; Julia L. A. Knapp; Megan J. Klaar; Paul Romeijn; Thibault Datry; Toralf Keller; Silvia Folegot; Amaia I. Marruedo Arricibita; Stefan Krause

Improved understanding of stream solute transport requires meaningful comparison of processes across a wide range of discharge conditions and spatial scales. At reach scales where solute tracer tests are commonly used to assess transport behavior, such comparison is still confounded due to the challenge of separating dispersive and transient storage processes from the influence of the advective timescale that varies with discharge and reach length. To better resolve interpretation of these processes from field-based tracer observations, we conducted recurrent conservative solute tracer tests along a 1 km study reach during a storm discharge period and further discretized the study reach into six segments of similar length but different channel morphologies. The resulting suite of data, spanning an order of magnitude in advective timescales, enabled us to (1) characterize relationships between tracer response and discharge in individual segments and (2) determine how combining the segments into longer reaches influences interpretation of dispersion and transient storage from tracer tests. We found that the advective timescale was the primary control on the shape of the observed tracer response. Most segments responded similarly to discharge, implying that the influence of morphologic heterogeneity was muted relative to advection. Comparison of tracer data across combined segments demonstrated that increased advective timescales could be misinterpreted as a change in dispersion or transient storage. Taken together, our results stress the importance of characterizing the influence of changing advective timescales on solute tracer responses before such reach-scale observations can be used to infer solute transport at larger network scales.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

High-frequency monitoring of catchment nutrient exports reveals highly variable storm-event responses and dynamic source zone activation

Phillip J. Blaen; Kieran Khamis; Charlotte E M Lloyd; Sophie Comer‐Warner; Francesco Ciocca; Rick M. Thomas; A. Rob MacKenzie; Stefan Krause

Storm events can drive highly variable behaviour in catchment nutrient and water fluxes, yet short-term event dynamics are frequently missed by low resolution sampling regimes. In addition, nutrient source zone contributions can vary significantly within and between storm events. Our inability to identify and characterise time-dynamic source zone contributions severely hampers the adequate design of land-use management practices in order to control nutrient exports from agricultural landscapes. Here, we utilise an 8-month high-frequency (hourly) time series of streamflow, nitrate (NO3-N), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and hydroclimatic variables for a headwater agricultural catchment. We identified 29 distinct storm events across the monitoring period. These events represented 31% of the time series and contributed disproportionately to nutrient loads (42% of NO3-N and 43% of DOC) relative to their duration. Regression analysis identified a small subset of hydroclimatological variables (notably precipitation intensity and antecedent conditions) as key drivers of nutrient dynamics during storm events. Hysteresis analysis of nutrient concentration-discharge relationships highlighted the dynamic activation of discrete NO3-N and DOC source zones, which varied on an event-specific basis. Our results highlight the benefits of high-frequency in situ monitoring for characterising short-term nutrient fluxes and unravelling connections between hydroclimatological variability and river nutrient export and source zone activation under extreme flow conditions. These new process-based insights, which we summarise in a conceptual model, are fundamental to underpinning targeted management measures to reduce nutrient loading of surface waters.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Rapid assessment of ecosystem services provided by two mineral extraction sites restored for nature conservation in an agricultural landscape in Eastern England

Phillip J. Blaen; Li Jia; Kelvin S.-H. Peh; Rob H. Field; Andrew Balmford; Michael A. MacDonald; Richard B. Bradbury

Despite growing recognition that mineral sites restored for nature conservation can enhance local biodiversity, the wider societal benefits provided by this type of restoration relative to alternative options are not well understood. This study addresses this research gap by quantifying differences in ecosystem services provision under two common mineral site after-uses: nature conservation and agriculture. Using a combination of site-specific primary field data, benefits transfer and modelling, we show that for our sites restoration for nature conservation provides a more diverse array of ecosystem services than would be delivered under an agricultural restoration scenario. We also explore the effects of addressing different conservation targets, which we find alter the provision of ecosystem services on a service-specific basis. Highly species-focused intervention areas are associated with increased carbon storage and livestock grazing provision, whereas non-intervention areas are important for carbon sequestration, fishing, recreation and flood risk mitigation. The results of this study highlight the wider societal importance of restored mineral sites and may help conservation managers and planners to develop future restoration strategies that provide benefits for both biodiversity and human well-being.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Functional diversity and community assembly of river invertebrates show globally consistent responses to decreasing glacier cover

Lee E. Brown; Kieran Khamis; Martin Wilkes; Phillip J. Blaen; John E. Brittain; Jonathan L. Carrivick; Sarah Fell; Nikolai Friberg; Leopold Füreder; Gísli Már Gíslason; Sarah Hainie; David M. Hannah; William H.M. James; Valeria Lencioni; Jón S. Ólafsson; Christopher T. Robinson; Svein Jakob Saltveit; Craig Thompson; Alexander M. Milner

Global change threatens invertebrate biodiversity and its central role in numerous ecosystem functions and services. Functional trait analyses have been advocated to uncover global mechanisms behind biodiversity responses to environmental change, but the application of this approach for invertebrates is underdeveloped relative to other organism groups. From an evaluation of 363 records comprising >1.23 million invertebrates collected from rivers across nine biogeographic regions on three continents, consistent responses of community trait composition and diversity to replicated gradients of reduced glacier cover are demonstrated. After accounting for a systematic regional effect of latitude, the processes shaping river invertebrate functional diversity are globally consistent. Analyses nested within individual regions identified an increase in functional diversity as glacier cover decreases. Community assembly models demonstrated that dispersal limitation was the dominant process underlying these patterns, although environmental filtering was also evident in highly glacierized basins. These findings indicate that predictable mechanisms govern river invertebrate community responses to decreasing glacier cover globally.Analysing >1 million river invertebrates from nine biogeographic regions, the authors show that functional trait diversity increases consistently as glacier cover decreases.


Ecohydrology | 2018

Woody debris is related to reach-scale hotspots of lowland stream ecosystem respiration under baseflow conditions

Phillip J. Blaen; Marie J. Kurz; Jennifer D. Drummond; Julia L. A. Knapp; Clara Mendoza-Lera; Noah M. Schmadel; Megan J. Klaar; A. Jäger; Silvia Folegot; Joseph Lee-Cullin; Adam S. Ward; Jay P. Zarnetske; Thibault Datry; Alexander M. Milner; Jörg Lewandowski; David M. Hannah; Stefan Krause

Stream metabolism is a fundamental, integrative indicator of aquatic ecosystem functioning. However, it is not well understood how heterogeneity in physical channel form, particularly in relation to and caused by in‐stream woody debris, regulates stream metabolism in lowland streams. We combined conservative and reactive stream tracers to investigate relationships between patterns in stream channel morphology and hydrological transport (form) and metabolic processes as characterized by ecosystem respiration (function) in a forested lowland stream at baseflow. Stream reach‐scale ecosystem respiration was related to locations (“hotspots”) with a high abundance of woody debris. In contrast, nearly all other measured hydrological and geomorphic variables previously documented or hypothesized to influence stream metabolism did not significantly explain ecosystem respiration. Our results suggest the existence of key differences in physical controls on ecosystem respiration between lowland stream systems (this study) and smaller upland streams (most previous studies) under baseflow conditions. As such, these findings have implications for reactive transport models that predict biogeochemical transformation rates from hydraulic transport parameters, for upscaling frameworks that represent biological stream processes at larger network scales, and for the effective management and restoration of aquatic ecosystems.


Conservation and Society | 2016

Ecosystem services provided by a former gravel extraction site in the uk under two contrasting restoration states

Phillip J. Blaen; Michael A. MacDonald; Richard B. Bradbury

Mineral extraction sites restored for nature conservation can provide areas of high quality habitat and enhance local biodiversity, yet the ecosystem services and associated socio-economic benefits delivered by such sites are not well understood. Here we use a combination of primary field data, benefit transfer, and visitor questionnaires to assess ecosystem services provided by a former gravel mining site restored for nature conservation. We quantify the marginal benefits accrued from the site by comparing ecosystem service delivery from the current nature conservation state to delivery under a highly plausible alternative restoration state; namely a public amenity park. Our results suggest restoration for nature conservation is associated with relatively high carbon storage, but that carbon sequestration is offset to some degree by greenhouse gas fluxes from saturated reed bed areas. We demonstrate through a zonal travel-cost method and individual interviews that restoration for nature conservation contributes to local amenity value by providing specialised wildlife viewing opportunities to visitors. Our results highlight the potential ecosystem services associated with mineral sites restored for nature conservation. Notably, this study strengthens the evidence base to support the case for biodiversity-focused restoration of these extraction sites, both to the minerals industry and governmental planners, by suggesting that such restoration strategies may play an important role in contributing to human well-being without impeding economic progress.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Multitracer Field Fluorometry: Accounting for Temperature and Turbidity Variability during Stream Tracer Tests

Phillip J. Blaen; Nicolai Brekenfeld; Sophie Comer‐Warner; Stefan Krause

The use of multitracer field fluorometry is increasing in the hydrological sciences. However, obtaining high-quality fluorescence measurements is challenging given the variability in environmental conditions within stream ecosystems. Here, we conducted a series of stream tracer tests to examine the degree to which multitracer field fluorometry produces reliable estimates of tracer concentrations under realistic field conditions. Using frequently applied examples of conservative (Uranine) and reactive (Resazurin-Resorufin) fluorescent tracers, we show that in situ measurements of tracer breakthrough curves can deviate markedly from corresponding samples analyzed under laboratory conditions. To investigate the effects of key environmental variables on fluorescence measurements, we characterized the response of field fluorometer measurements to changes in temperature, turbidity, and tracer concentration. Results showed pronounced negative log-linear effects of temperature on fluorescence measurements for all tracers, with stronger effects observed typically at lower tracer concentrations. We also observed linear effects of turbidity on fluorescence measurements that varied predictably with tracer concentration. Based on our findings, we present methods to correct field fluorometer measurements for variation in these parameters. Our results show how changing environmental conditions can introduce substantial uncertainties in the analysis of fluorescent tracer breakthrough curves, and highlight the importance of accounting for these changes to prevent incorrect inferences being drawn regarding the physical and biogeochemical processes underpinning observed patterns.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Real-time monitoring of nutrients and dissolved organic matter in rivers: Capturing event dynamics, technological opportunities and future directions

Phillip J. Blaen; Kieran Khamis; Charlotte E M Lloyd; Chris Bradley; David M. Hannah; Stefan Krause


Hydrological Processes | 2012

Water temperature dynamics in High Arctic river basins

Phillip J. Blaen; David M. Hannah; Lee E. Brown; Alexander M. Milner


Hydrological Processes | 2014

Water source dynamics of high Arctic river basins

Phillip J. Blaen; David M. Hannah; Lee E. Brown; Alexander M. Milner

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Stefan Krause

University of Birmingham

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Kieran Khamis

University of Birmingham

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Silvia Folegot

University of Birmingham

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Adam S. Ward

Indiana University Bloomington

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