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Impacts of freshwater wetlands on water quality: A landscape perspective
Authors:Dennis F. Whigham  Carin Chitterling  Brian Palmer
Affiliation:(1) Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Box 28, 21037 Edgewater, Maryland, USA
Abstract:In this article, we suggest that a landscape approach might be useful in evaluating the effects of cumulative impacts on freshwater wetlands. The reason for using this approach is that most watersheds contain more than one wetland, and effects on water quality depend on the types of wetlands and their position in the landscape. Riparian areas that border uplands appear to be important sites for nitrogen processing and retention of large sediment particles. Fine particles associated with high concentrations of phosphorus are retained in downstream wetlands, where flow rates are slowed and where the surface water passes through plant litter. Riverine systems also may play an important role in processing nutrients, primarily during flooding events. Lacustrine wetlands appear to have the least impact on water quality, due to the small ratio of vegetated surface to open water. Examples are given of changes that occurred when the hydrology of a Maryland floodplain was altered.
Keywords:Cumulative impacts  Freshwater wetlands  Lacustrine  Landscape ecology  Palustrine  Riparian  Riverine  Sediment  Water quality  Wetland continuum
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