Water Stewardship Information Sources

Resource Name Forest harvest impacts on water quality and aquatic biota on the Boreal Plain: introduction to the TROLS lake program
Unique File Number 332
Information Type applied Research
Surface Water A
Aquatic Ecosystem A
Groundwater
Groundwater & Surface Water
Management for Natural & Industrial Hazards
Strengths
Limitations
Challenges
Outstanding Research Questions
Outstanding Research Questions
Information Subtype boreal hydrology
Organization TROLS Project
Resource Name Prepas, EE et al. Forest harvest impacts on water quality and awuatic biota on the Boreal Plain: introduction to the TROLS lake program. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 2001, 58(2): 421-436, 10.1139/f00-259
Resource Purpose Eleven headwater lakes in Alberta's Boreal Plain were monitored for nutrients and plankton 2 years before and 2 years after variable watershed harvesting (harvesting mean 15%, range 0-35%). After harvesting, variations in annual precipitation resulted in lake water residence times that differed by an order of magnitude from one year to the next. During the first posttreatment year, total phosphorus concentrations increased (overall 40%) in most lakes; however, response was most consistent in lakes that were shallow and the water column mixed or weakly thermally stratified. Chlorophyll a, cyanobacteria (Aphanizomenon-Anabaena), and cyanotoxins (microcystin-LR) increased after harvesting, primarily in shallow lakes. Zooplankton abundance and biomass decreased after harvesting, particularly in stratified lakes where edible phytoplankton biomass declined. In the weakly or nonstratified lakes, declines in zooplankton biomass were associated with higher cyanobacterial biomass and cyanotoxins. Posttreatment change in total phosphorus concentration was strongly related to weather (greatest response in a wet year) and relative drainage basin size (drainage basin area to lake volume, r2 = 0,78, P << 0,01). There was no evidence that buffer strip width (20, 100, and 200 m) influenced lake response. These results suggest that activities within the entire watershed should be the focus of catchment-lake interactions.
Type of Information article
How does this help decision making?
Program Status complete
NE Coverage boreal Plains
Drinking Water
Ecosystem y
Fish y
Groundwater
Public Safety
SW Quality y
SW Quantity
Link http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/abs/10.1139/f00-259#.UyJnWD9dWSp
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