Skip to main content
Log in

Strategies for assessing the cumulative effects of wetland alteration on water quality

  • Published:
Environmental Management Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Assessment of cumulative impacts on wetlands can benefit by recognizing three fundamental wetland categories: basin, riverine, and fringe. The geomorphological settings of these categories have relevance for water quality.

Basin, or depressional, wetlands are located in headwater areas, and capture runoff from small areas. Thus, they are normally sources of water with low elemental concentration. Although basin wetlands normally possess a high capacity for assimilating nutrients, there may be little opportunity for this to happen if the catchment area is small and little water flows through them.

Riverine wetlands, in contrast, interface extensively with uplands. It has been demonstrated that both the capacity and the opportunity for altering water quality are high in riverine wetlands.

Fringe wetlands are very small in comparison with the large bodies of water that flush them. Biogeochemical influences tend to be local, rather than having a measurable effect on the larger body of water. Consequently, the function of these wetlands for critical habitat may warrant protection from high nutrient levels and toxins, rather than expecting them to assume an assimilatory role.

The relative proportion of these wetland types within a watershed, and their status relative to past impacts can be used to develop strategies for wetland protection. Past impacts on wetlands, however, are not likely to be clearly revealed in water quality records from monitoring studies, either because records are too short or because too many variables other than wetland impacts affect water quality. It is suggested that hydrologic records be used to reconstruct historical hydroperiods in wetlands for comparison with current, altered conditions. Changes in hydroperiod imply changes in wetland function, especially for biogeochemical processes in sediments. Hydroperiod is potentially a more sensitive index of wetland function than surface areas obtained from aerial photographs. Identification of forested wetlands through photointerpretation relies on vegetation that may remain intact for decades after drainage. Finally, the depositional environment of wetlands is a landscape characteristic that has not been carefully evaluated nor fully appreciated. Impacts that reverse depositional tendencies also may accelerate rates of change, causing wetlands to be large net exporters rather than modest net importers. Increases in rates as well as direction can cause stocks of materials, accumulated over centuries in wetland sediments, to be lost within decades, resulting in nutrient loading to downstream aquatic ecosystems.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

Literature cited

  • Armentano, R. V., E. S. Menges, J. Molofsky, and D. J. Lawler. 1984. Carbon exchange of organic soils ecosystems of the world. Holcomb Research Institute Paper 27, Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bayley, S. E., J. Zoltek, Jr., A. J. Hermann, T. J. Dolan, and L. Tortora. 1985. Experimental manipulation of nutrients and water in a freshwater marsh: Effects on biomass, decomposition, and nutrient accumulation.Limnology and Oceanography 30:500–512.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bodaly, R. A., R. E. Hecky, and R. J. P. Fudge. 1984. Increases in fish mercury levels in lakes flooded by the Churchill River Diversion, Northern Manitoba.Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science 41:682–691.

    Google Scholar 

  • Brinson, M. M., B. L. Swift, R. C. Plantico, and J. S. Barclay. 1981. Riparian ecosystems: Their ecology and status. FWS/OBS-81/17. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D.C., 155 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Browder, J. A., and B. G. Volk. 1978. Systems model of carbon transformations in soil subsidence.Ecological Modelling 5:269–292.

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown, S., M. M. Brinson, and A. E. Lugo. 1979. Structure and function of riparian wetlands. Pages 17–31in R. R. Johnson and J. F. McCormick (tech. coord.), Strategies for protection and management of floodplain wetlands and other riparian ecosystems. U.S. Forest Service General Technical Report WO-12, U.S. Forest Service, Washington, D.C.

    Google Scholar 

  • Carter, M. R., L. A. Burns, T. R. Cavinder, K. R. Dugger, P. L. Fore, D. B. Hicks, H. L. Revells, and T. W. Schmidt. 1973. Ecosystems analysis of the Big Cypress Swamp and estuaries. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency report 904/9-74-002, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Atlanta, Georgia.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cooper, J. R., J. W. Gilliam, R. B. Daniels, and W. P. Robarge. 1987. Riparian areas as filters for agricultural sediment.Soil Science Society of America Journal 51:416–420.

    Google Scholar 

  • DeLaune, R. D., C. N. Reddy, and W. H. Patrick, Jr. 1981. Accumulation of plant nutrients and heavy metals through sedimentation processes and accretion in a Louisiana salt marsh.Estuaries 4:328–334.

    Google Scholar 

  • Everitt, B. L. 1968. Use of the cotton wood in an investigation of the recent history of a flood plain.American Journal of Science 288:417–439.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hemond, H. F., and J. Benoit. 1988. Cumulative impacts on water quality functions of wetlands.Environmental Management 12(5):639–653.

    Google Scholar 

  • Herdendorf, C. E., C. N. Raphael, and E. Jaworski. 1986. The ecology of Lake St. Clair wetlands: A community profile. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 85 (7.7), U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D.C., 187 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hill, C. L., J. F. Rinehardt, and T. E. Dillard. 1984. Water resources data, North Carolina, water year 1984. U.S. Geological Survey Water Data Report NC-84-1, U.S. Geological Survey, Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hutchinson, J. N. 1980. The record of peat wastage in the East Anglian Fenlands at Holme Post, 1849–1978 A.D..Journal of Ecology 68:229–249.

    Google Scholar 

  • Karr, J. R., and I. J. Schlosser. 1978. Water resources and the land-water interface.Science 201:229–234.

    Google Scholar 

  • Kuenzler, E. J., P. J. Mulholland, L. A. Ruley, and R. P. Sniffen. 1977. Water quality in North Carolina coastal plain streams and effects of channelization. Water Resources Research Institute Report 127, Water Resources Research Institute, University of North Carolina, Raleigh, North Carolina, 160 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lee, L. C., and J. G. Gosselink. 1988. Cumulative impacts on wetlands: Linking scientific assessments and regulatory alternatives.Environmental Management 12(5):591–602.

    Google Scholar 

  • Leopold, L. B., M. G. Wolman, and J. P. Miller. 1964. Fluvial processes in geomorphology. W. H. Freeman, San Francisco, California, 522 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lowrance, R. R., R. L. Todd, J. Fail, O. Hendrickson, R. Leonard, and L. Asmussen. 1984. Riparian forests as nutrient filters in agricultural watersheds.BioScience 34:374–377.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lugo, A. E., M. M. Brinson, and S. Brown. 1988a. Synthesis and search for paradigms in wetland ecology.In A. E. Lugo, M. M. Brinson, and S. Brown (eds.), Forested wetlands. Elsevier, Amsterdam, in press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lugo, A. E., S. Brown, and M. M. Brinson. 1988b. Forested wetlands in freshwater and saltwater environments.Limnology and Oceanography, 33(4), in press.

  • Lugo, A. E., and S. C. Snedaker. 1974. The ecology of mangroves.Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 5:39–64.

    Google Scholar 

  • Odum, W. E., T. J. Smith III, J. K. Hoover, and C. C. Mclvor. 1984. The ecology of tidal freshwater marshes of the United States East Coast: A community profile. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service FWS/OBS-83/17, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington D.C., 177 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Peterjohn, W. T., and D. L. Correll. 1984. Nutrient dynamics in an agricultural watershed: Observations on the role of a riparian forest.Ecology 65:1466–1475.

    Google Scholar 

  • Sigafoos, R. S. 1964. Botanical evidence of floods and floodplain deposition. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 485-A. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.

    Google Scholar 

  • Simpson, R. L., R. E. Good, M. A. Leck, and D. F. Whigham. 1983. The ecology of freshwater tidal wetlands.BioScience 33:255–259.

    Google Scholar 

  • Stephens, J. C. 1956. Subsidence of organic soils in the Florida Everglades.Soil Science Society of America Proceedings 20:77–80.

    Google Scholar 

  • Tiner, R. W. 1984. Wetlands of the United States: Current status and recent trends. National Wetlands Inventory, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington D.C., 58 pp.

    Google Scholar 

  • Valiela, I., J. M. Teal, S. Volkmann, D. Shafer, and E. J. Carpenter. 1978. Nutrient and particulate fluxes in a salt marsh ecosystem: Tidal exchanges and inputs by precipitation and groundwater.Limnology and Oceanography 23:798–812.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ward, R. C., J. C. Loftis, and G. B. McBride. 1986. The datarich but information-poor syndrome in water quality monitoring.Environmental Management 10:291–297.

    Google Scholar 

  • Weir, W. W. 1950. Subsidence of peat lands of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California.Hilgardia 20:37–56.

    Google Scholar 

  • Whigham, D. F., C. Chitterling, and B. Palmer. 1988. Impacts of freshwater wetlands on water quality: A landscape perspective.Environmental Management 12(5):663–671.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Brinson, M.M. Strategies for assessing the cumulative effects of wetland alteration on water quality. Environmental Management 12, 655–662 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01867543

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01867543

Key words

Navigation