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Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma Lake Baikal Sensor: Terra/MODIS Date: 10/23/2001
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Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Linking watershed characteristics and land use to

lake water quality using GIS

presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma

Lake BaikalSensor: Terra/MODIS Date: 10/23/2001

Page 2: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Benefits of GIS?

• Integrates, stores, edits, analyzes, shares, and displays geographic information.

• A growing body of existing data can be leveraged for analysis (e.g., USGS DEMs, NLCD 2001, National Hydrography Dataset, and Landsat).

• Data can be exported to non-spatial modeling tools (e.g. multivariate regression analysis).

Page 3: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

• An increasing flow of data is provided by remote sensing platforms.

• Rapid response allows detection of temporal changes caused by anthropogenic land use, climate change, or natural processes.

Page 4: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Our analysis unit (graphic courtesy of Chester County (Pa) Citizens for Climate Protection).

Page 5: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

GIS as applied to limnology:

• “Lakes are intimately linked to their catchment” (Maberly et al., 2003).

• A watershed is influenced from unique geology, climate, soils, topography, and vegetation over time.

• These factors greatly influence lake chemistry and trophic conditions.

• Physical measurements give additional data on how lakes respond to landscape (e.g. retention time).

Page 6: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Ostrofsky and Bradley (2006) found that 200m riparian buffers gave significant results for estimation of phosphorus loading.

Page 7: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Coats et al. (2008) established that impervious surfaces and residential land use degraded water quality.

Page 8: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

TP, TN, DOC, DRP, turbidity, and TSS measured by Galbraith and Burns (2007).

Page 9: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Ordination diagram of geographic variables from Galbraith and Burns (2007).

Page 10: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Regression of Nitrogen versus catchment slope from Maberly et al., (2003).

Page 11: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

The future, rapid response? Agricultural runoff from the Danube R. and phytoplankton bloom in the Black Sea.

Black SeaSensor: Aqua/MODISDate: 05/25/2004

Page 12: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

Conclusion:

• Watershed characteristics can predict trophic status.

• Galbraith and Burns (2007) indicated that conversion of native grasses to pasture would reduce water quality (i.e. human disturbance has negative impacts).

• The importance of scale in modeling.

• Bennion et al., (2005) demonstrated that a GIS lake inventory could be used to evaluate risk and prioritize remediation efforts.

• Ostrofsky and Bradley estimated pre European lake trophic status to establish baseline levels for management.

• Standard statistical techniques provided useful results.

Page 13: Linking watershed characteristics and land use to lake water quality using GIS presented by Brian Block ESR 575 - Limnology instructed by Dr. Mark Sytsma.

References:

• Bennion, H., et al. 2005. The use of GIS-based inventory to provide a national assessment of standing waters at risk from eutrophication in Great Britain. Science of the Total Environment 344:259-273.

• Coats, R., et al. 2008. Nutrient and sediment production, watershed-characteristics and land use in the Tahoe Basin, California-Nevada. Journal of the American Water Resources Association 44(3):754-770.

• Davies, B.R., et al. 2008. A comparison of the catchment sizes of rivers, streams, ponds, ditches and lakes: implications for protecting aquatic biodiversity in an agricultural landscape. Hydrobiologia 597:7-17.

• Galbraith, L.M. and Burns, C.W. 2007. Linking land-use, water body type and water quality in southern New Zealand. Landscape Ecol 22:231-241.

• Maberly, S.C., et al. 2003. Linking nutrient limitation and water chemistry in upland lakes to catchment characteristics. Hydrobiologia 506-509:7-17.

• Ostrofsky, M.L. and Bradley, C.P. 2006. Reconstructing the historical trophic status of northwestern Pennsylvania lakes using GIS. Hydrobiologia 571:273-281.