Beaver dams overshadow climate extremes in controlling riparian hydrology and water quality
Abstract
Hydrologic extremes dominate chemical exports from riparian zones and dictate water quality in major river systems. Yet, changes in land use and ecosystem services alongside growing climate variability are altering hydrologic extremes and their coupled impacts on riverine water quality. In the western U.S., warming temperatures and intensified aridification are increasingly paired with the expanding range of the American beaver-and their dams, which transform hydrologic and biogeochemical cycles in riparian systems. Here, we show that beaver dams overshadow climatic hydrologic extremes in their effects on water residence time and oxygen and nitrogen fluxes in the riparian subsurface. In a mountainous watershed in Colorado, U.S.A., we find that the increase in riparian hydraulic gradients imposed by a beaver dam is 10.7-13.3 times greater than seasonal hydrologic extremes. The massive hydraulic gradient increases hyporheic nitrate removal by 44.2% relative to seasonal extremes alone. A drier, hotter climate in the western U.S. will further expand the range of beavers and magnify their impacts on watershed hydrology and biogeochemistry, illustrating that ecosystem feedbacks to climate change will alter water quality in river systems.
Local Knowledge Graph (10 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Beaver dams overshadow climate extremes in controlling riparian hydrology and water quality
Return flows from beaver ponds enhance floodplain-to-river metals exchange in alluvial mountain catchments
Modeling the Impact of Riparian Hollows on River Corridor Nitrogen Exports
Hydrogeochemical data for the characterization of stream, groundwater, and beaver-induced floodplain exchange in the East River Science Focus Area, Crested Butte, CO
A New Hydrologic Perspective of How Beaver Ponds Function
New Water Development By Enhancing and Restoring Wetlands and Beaver Dam Complexes
Beaver Re-introduction
Surface Water Quality Data from Beaver-Impacted Streams; Trail Creek and East River, Colorado 2025
Bedrock weathering rates, reactive nitrogen influxes and effluxes, and nitrous oxide emissions rates from the Pumphouse Hillslope, East River Watershed, Colorado.
Cited 33 times
References (35)
3 in Knowledge Hub, 32 external
