Land cover, management, and pollution effects on water quality
Understanding what is in the water has also been a central
research theme at the FEF. Erosion and sedimentation assessments of land
management practices have been important since the initial research
(Hornbeck & Reinhart 1964). Monitoring of stream-water chemistry began
in 1958 for some analytes but more extensive assessments were initiated
in the 1970’s (Patric & Smith, 1978) and especially in the period from
1980 – 2000 following improvements in lab facilities and the start of a
whole-watershed acidification study in 1989 (reviewed in Adams et al.,
2006) (Figure 3). Through studies of stream chemistry, FEF research has
advanced understanding of how past land-use practices (legacy effects),
the composition of tree species (Peterjohn et al. 2015), and acid
deposition have affected ecosystem processes (Edwards et al., 2002).
[Insert Figure 3 here]