• Tracking the pulse of America's rivers

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Feb 22 21:31:34 2022
    Tracking the pulse of America's rivers
    Scientists are monitoring hundreds of streams across the U.S., to better predict how freshwater vital signs might shift with land development and climate change

    Date:
    February 22, 2022
    Source:
    Duke University
    Summary:
    Researchers are using modern sensor technology to automatically
    track oxygen levels and other stream vital signs 24/7, through
    changing seasons, floods and droughts. In a new study, researchers
    analyzed at least a year's worth of data from 222 rivers across
    the United States.

    The hope is that continuous tracking will get them closer to
    understanding the 'pulse' of streams, and how their ability to
    support life might change with land development and climate change.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    On one of the first mild days in February, Duke's Emily Bernhardt and
    her stream ecology team donned their hip waders and ventured out to the sycamore- lined banks of New Hope Creek.


    ==========================================================================
    The creek snakes its way through parts of Chapel Hill and Durham before emptying into Jordan lake, the main supply of drinking water for central
    North Carolina.

    Bernhardt waded into the shallow stream and dipped a gas sensor into
    the water.

    She and colleagues have been monitoring fluctuations in oxygen and carbon dioxide that occur as these gases are taken up and released by algae,
    insects, fish and other stream organisms while they go about the business
    of life: photosynthesizing, growing, digesting, decomposing.

    "This 'breathing in and breathing out' of all the organisms living
    in a river is sort of the pulse of a stream," Bernhardt said. "It's
    a fundamental measure of the energy going in and out of the system." Traditionally, such studies have relied on measurements of a small number
    of streams taken over a few hours or days -- essentially a snapshot. The difficulty is that irregularity and upheaval are the norms for streams,
    said former Duke postdoc Phil Savoy.

    Streamflow can change from day to day and even minute to minute with
    seasons and storms. Organisms living in the river must contend with
    flows that range from a torrent to a trickle.



    ==========================================================================
    "On any given day you can go down to your local creek, and it might be
    dry, or it might be flooding over the banks," Savoy said.

    Now, thanks to modern sensor technology, scientists can automatically
    track stream vital signs 24 hours a day, seven days a week, over the
    course of weeks and months. The data are uploaded to a public web portal
    where anyone can visualize or download it.

    "It's like having your pulse taken once at the doctor's office versus
    wearing a Fitbit," Bernhardt said.

    In a paper published Feb. 14 in the journal Proceedings of the National
    Academy of Sciences, Bernhardt, Savoy and colleagues from nine other institutions analyzed at least a year's worth of data from 222 rivers
    across the United States: winding through Arizona deserts, rushing through Puerto Rican rainforests, meandering through farmland in the Midwest.

    Sensors recorded dissolved oxygen, carbon dioxide, light, and other data
    every five minutes day and night, through changing seasons, floods and droughts. The hope is that continuous tracking will get them closer to understanding the 'pulse' of streams, and how their ability to support
    life might change with land development and climate change.



    ========================================================================== Bernhardt rejoined the rest of her lab upstream where they were collecting mayflies and other bugs. There, she pulled up a fistful of fallen leaves
    and a rock covered in a green-brown goo called periphyton -- a mix of
    algae and microbes that clings to rocks and twigs in the streambed.

    "This is the base of the food web," Bernhardt said. "A lot of bugs make
    a living off these." Periphyton captures energy from the sun and uses
    it to grow. Insects, snails and mussels feed on the periphyton algae,
    and fish hunt and consume the insects.

    What happens to stream life will likely depend on how human activity
    changes the amount of sunlight that reaches the water, and the stability
    of flow, the study authors report.

    At New Hope Creek, leafy sycamores, beeches and sweetgum trees shade the
    edges for much of the year, forming a canopy that limits the light that
    can reach the narrower stretches of the stream.

    Climate change-caused shifts in rainfall -- intense droughts or flash
    floods - - can dry out or blast away the algae and other organisms that
    form the base of the food web, Bernhardt said.

    On this day, the sun-dappled water gurgling over rocks and riffles made
    for a placid scene. "But three weeks ago it was raging," Bernhart said.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Duke_University. Original written
    by Robin Smith. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Emily S. Bernhardt, Phil Savoy, Michael J. Vlah, Alison P. Appling,
    Lauren E. Koenig, Robert O. Hall, Maite Arroita, Joanna
    R. Blaszczak, Alice M. Carter, Matt Cohen, Judson W. Harvey,
    James B. Heffernan, Ashley M. Helton, Jacob D. Hosen, Lily Kirk,
    William H. McDowell, Emily H.

    Stanley, Charles B. Yackulic, Nancy B. Grimm. Light and flow
    regimes regulate the metabolism of rivers. Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences, 2022; 119 (8): e2121976119 DOI:
    10.1073/pnas.2121976119 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220222135158.htm

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