Browsing by Author "Hunter, S"
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- ItemHydrological connectivity and ecological functional processes in inland floodplain wetlands: nutrient and carbon cycling(Australian Society for Limnology, 2013-12-03) Wassens, S; Ralph, TJ; Ryder, DS; Saintilan, N; Mazumder, D; Wen, L; Hunter, S; Kobayashi, TFloodplain wetlands have intricate multi-channeled networks and unpredictable wet and dry phases related to variable hydrological regimes and geomorphic processes such as sedimentation and erosion. Hydrological reconnection of river channels with outer floodplain and wetland habitats initiates mobilisation and transformation of nutrients and carbon in inland floodplain wetlands. In this study, we aim to show habitat-dependent patterns of mobilisation and transformation of nutrients (total and dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) following environmental water releases, based on the available data from the Murrumbidgee Wetlands, Macquarie Marshes and Gwydir Wetlands. In general, concentrations of nutrients and DOC are lower within channels and higher on the floodplain and in wetlands where shallow inundation and mixing of topsoil with water occurs. Higher concentrations of nutrients and DOC on the floodplain represent a combination of supply from channels coupled with in situ releases from the water-soil interface. The volume, timing, depth, rate of rise and fall, and spatial distribution of water being introduced to floodplain wetlands influence the amount and distribution of nutrients and carbon in these systems. Rates of ecological functional processes such as primary productivity and respiration (or decomposition) are closely related to concentrations of nutrients and DOC. We propose a nutrient-DOC framework, combined with hydrological regimes and geomorphic processes, to better predict and understand the relationship between hydrological connectivity and ecological responses of inland floodplain wetlands. © The Authors
- ItemLongitudinal spatial variation in ecological conditions in an in-channel floodplain river system during flow pulses(Wiley-Blackwell, 2011-05-01) Kobayashi, T; Ryder, DS; Ralph, TJ; Mazumder, D; Saintilan, N; Iles, J; Knowles, L; Thomas, R; Hunter, SA field survey was conducted during flow pulses to investigate the longitudinal spatial patterns in water quality, dissolved inorganic and organic matter, phytoplankton, planktonic bacteria, zooplankton, gross primary productivity (GPP) of phytoplankton and planktonic respiration (PR) in channels of the large floodplain system (similar to 124 km in length) of the Macquarie Marshes, south-eastern Australia. Four river reaches (areas) with distinct hydrogeomorphological characteristics within the distributary zone of the lower Macquarie River were chosen for analysis of abiotic and biotic variables in their in-stream environments. The results showed marked longitudinal spatial variation in the values within and among the measured environmental variables including such functional aspects as primary productivity and PR. The variables that tended to have increasing values in a downstream direction were conductivity, total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP), dissolved silica, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP), ratio of DOC/DON and counts of planktonic bacteria. Conversely, the values that tended to decrease downstream were the ratios of TN/TP, DIN/DRP, DOC/DOP, DON/DOP and GPP/PR. Variables that had a localized peak(s) were dissolved oxygen, turbidity, dissolved inorganic nitrogen, GPP, PR and counts of cyanobacteria, diatoms, green algae, cryptomonads, protozoans, rotifers, copepods and cladocerans. Overall, two distinct ecological zones were identified within the broader distributary functional process zone (FPZ): these being the upstream zone with relatively high levels of DO, turbidity, diatoms and GPP/PR ratio, and the downstream zone with relatively high levels of nutrients, dissolved organic matter, cyanobacteria, planktonic bacteria, protozoans and cladocerans. The results of this study describe the spatial connectivity of ecological processes related to hydrogeomorphological factors within a FPZ of a riverine ecosystem, and support the predictions of the riverine ecosystem synthesis framework that ecological patterns and processes can be discontinuous on a longitudinal spatial scale. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.