Assessing Stream Temperature Interactions with Physical and Environmental Variables Along the Longitudinal Profile of a First- to Fourth-Order Perennial Stream in a Multi-Land Use Watershed in Western Oregon, USA
2025
Derek C. Godwin | Carlos G. Ochoa
Stream temperatures are expected to increase with warming air temperatures, yet the extent and aquatic health impacts vary significantly across heterogeneous landscapes. This study was conducted in a 3360-ha multi-land-use watershed in the Pacific Northwest region of the USA to assess and compare the driving factors for stream temperature heating, cooling, and cool-water refugia along a 12-km mainstem stream longitudinal profile. Study objectives were to (1) determine yearlong stream temperature variability along the entire stream longitudinal profile, and (2) assess stream-environment relationships influencing stream temperature dynamics across forest, agriculture, and urban landscapes within the watershed. Stream and riparian air temperatures, solar radiation, shade, and related stream-riparian characteristics were measured over six years at 21 stations to determine changes, along the longitudinal profile, of thermal sensitivity, maximum and minimum stream temperatures, and correlation between solar radiation and temperature increases, and potential causal factors associated with these changes. Solar radiation was a primary heating factor for an exposed agricultural land use reach with 57% effective shade, while southern stream aspects and incoming tributary conditions were primary factors for forested reaches with greater than 84% effective shade. Potential primary cooling factors were streambank height, groundwater inflows, and hyporheic exchange in an urban reach with moderate effective shade (79%) and forest riparian width (16 m). Combining watershed-scale analysis with on-site stream-environmental data collection helps assess primary temperature heating factors, such as solar radiation and shade, and potential cooling factors, such as groundwater and cool tributary inflows, as conditions change along the longitudinal profile.
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