Organic matter transport and retention in a blackwater stream recovering from flow augmentation and thermal discharge

Organic and inorganic seston, benthic organic matter and woody debris were studied in a blackwater stream/floodplain system recovering from flow augmentation and thermal discharges. The stream had received cooling waters from two nuclear reactors from the mid-1950s to 1968, resulting in flows over 10x greater than normal and temperatures that exceeded 70°C. Channel morphology was markedly altered, woody debris was removed or buried, and floodplain vegetation was destroyed. Fifteen years after termination of cooling water discharges, the stream continued to exhibit many characteristics of a disturbed system. Compared to an undistributed reference stream, the recovering stream had substantially less benthic organic matter, fewer snags and debris dams, and transported more organic and inorganic seston of all size fractions examined. Because of the importance of these biophysical factors in the structural morphology of blackwater streams, it is hypothesized that complete recovery will not be realized until the floodplain forest has matured and large woody debris is contributed to the stream channel.

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