Adjustment of Prairie Pothole Streams to Land‐Use, Drainage and Climate Changes and Consequences for Turbidity Impairment (original) (raw)

2011, River Research and Applications

ABSTRACTChanges in land use and drainage have contributed to channel adjustment in small‐order to medium‐order streams in the prairie pothole region of south‐west Minnesota. Although conversion from prairie to agriculture occurred a century ago, recent decades have seen increased subsurface tile drainage, annual row crop coverage and channel modifications, particularly at road crossings such that channel adjustment is ongoing. Channel evolution in Elm and Center Creeks, two fourth‐order streams in the Blue Earth River basin, was studied to understand relationships between changes in channel morphology and suspended sediment concentrations. The construction of drainage ditches and expanded subsurface tiling has connected isolated basins to stream channels, effectively increasing drainage areas of Elm and Center Creeks by 15–20%. Sinuosity has been reduced by grading and drainage of first‐order sloughs, channel straightening at road crossings and natural cut‐offs and agricultural ditc...

DEMONSTRATION OF DRAINAGE CHANNEL RESTORATION TO IMPROVE STREAM INTEGRITY AND MAINTAIN FLOW CAPACITY Final Narrative Report to the Great Lakes Protection Fund

2004

Highly modified channels drain extensive portions of productive agricultural land in the U.S.A. In many of these areas, most natural channels have been deepened and straightened to facilitate the flow of water from agricultural subsurface drainage outlets and to maximize conveyance. Work done periodically to maintain the drainage function typically includes removal of woody vegetation and deposited sediment. Ancillary work includes stabilizing bank slope failures and toe scour. Ditch form is a result of not only construction and maintenance but also, to verifying degrees, due to fluvial (flowing water) processes. The purpose of this project was to demonstrate through applied research and outreach education an alternative drainage channel form approach that incorporates naturalized fluvial features to enhance stream integrity and maintain or improve drainage capacity. The objectives of this project, addressed below, focused on understanding the conditions that favor such evolution an...

Channelization effects on floodplain functions in western Tennessee

2001

We examined six river reaches in western Tennessee over a two-year period to determine how channel alteration affected floodplain hydrology and nutrient pools. Four sites, two depression and two non-depression, were established on the floodplains of each river, and data on vegetation, water table depth, redox potential, and soil and leaf nutrient pools were collected. Chamelized streams had higher mean water tables and lower soil redox potentials than non-channelized or channelized and leveed streams. Leveed systems appeared to have mostly oxidized soil conditions, similar to uplands. Leaf and soil nutrient pools were generally higher in non-depression sites, especially for channelized streams. A drought between the first and second years of sampling rendered very different results between the two sampling occasions. Following the drying of the floodplain, nutrient pools were not significantly different between depression and nondepression sites. These results underscore the need fo...

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