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Journal ArticleDOI

Accounting for groundwater in stream fish thermal habitat responses to climate change.

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TLDR
Air-water temperature regression models can provide a powerful and cost-effective approach for predicting future stream temperatures while accounting for effects of groundwater and Habitat fragmentation due to thermal barriers may have an increasingly important role for trout population viability in headwater streams.
Abstract
Forecasting climate change effects on aquatic fauna and their habitat requires an understanding of how water temperature responds to changing air temperature (i.e., thermal sensitivity). Previous efforts to forecast climate effects on brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) habitat have generally assumed uniform air-water temperature relationships over large areas that cannot account for groundwater inputs and other processes that operate at finer spatial scales. We developed regression models that accounted for groundwater influences on thermal sensitivity from measured air-water temperature relationships within forested watersheds in eastern North America (Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, USA, 78 sites in nine watersheds). We used these reach-scale models to forecast climate change effects on stream temperature and brook trout thermal habitat, and compared our results to previous forecasts based upon large-scale models. Observed stream temperatures were generally less sensitive to air temperature than previously assumed, and we attribute this to the moderating effect of shallow groundwater inputs. Predicted groundwater temperatures from air-water regression models corresponded well to observed groundwater temperatures elsewhere in the study area. Predictions of brook trout future habitat loss derived from our fine-grained models. were far less pessimistic than those from prior models developed at coarser spatial resolutions. However, our models also revealed spatial variation in thermal sensitivity within and among catchments resulting in a patchy distribution of thermally suitable habitat. Habitat fragmentation due to thermal barriers therefore may have an increasingly important role for trout population viability in headwater streams. Our results demonstrate that simple adjustments to air-water temperature regression models can provide a powerful and cost-effective approach for predicting future stream temperatures while accounting for effects of groundwater.

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Climate Change Effects on North American Inland Fish Populations and Assemblages

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize climate trends that may influence North American inland fish populations and assemblages, compile 31 peer-reviewed studies of documented climate change effects on North American fish populations, and highlight four case studies representing a variety of observed responses ranging from warmwater systems in the southwestern and southeastern United States to coldwater systems along the Pacific Coast and Canadian Shield.
Journal ArticleDOI

Projected shifts in fish species dominance in Wisconsin lakes under climate change

TL;DR: A thermodynamic model of water temperatures driven by downscaled climate data and lake-specific characteristics is developed to estimate daily water temperature profiles for 2148 lakes in Wisconsin, US, and identifies up to 85 resilient lakes predicted to continue to support natural walleye recruitment.
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Rethinking the longitudinal stream temperature paradigm: region‐wide comparison of thermal infrared imagery reveals unexpected complexity of river temperatures

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors constructed longitudinal thermal profiles (temperature vs distance) for 53 rivers in the Pacific Northwest (USA) using an extensive data set of remotely sensed summertime river temperatures and classified each profile into one of five patterns of downstream warming: asymptotic (increasing then flattening), linear (increasing steadily), uniform (not changing), or complex (not fitting other classes).
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of thermal infrared to fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing for evaluation of groundwater discharge to surface water.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared two increasingly common heat tracing methods to locate discrete groundwater discharge: direct contact measurements made with fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) and remote sensing measurements collected with thermal infrared (TIR) cameras.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Linking climate change modelling to impacts studies: recent advances in downscaling techniques for hydrological modelling

TL;DR: There is a need for a move away from comparison studies into the provision of decision-making tools for planning and management that are robust to future uncertainties; with examination and understanding of uncertainties within the modelling system.
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Declining mountain snowpack in western north america

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined manual and telemetered measurements of spring snowpack, corroborated by a physically based hydrologic model, for climate-driven fluctuations and trends during the period of 1916-2002.
Journal ArticleDOI

The thermal regime of rivers : a review

Daniel Caissie
- 01 Aug 2006 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, different river thermal processes responsible for water temperature variability on both the temporal (e.g. diel, daily, seasonal) and spatial scales, as well as providing information related to different water temperature models currently found in the literature are reviewed.
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Heat as a ground water tracer.

TL;DR: Ground water temperature data and associated analytical tools are currently underused and have not yet realized their full potential, according to this review paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature Tolerances of North American Freshwater Fishes Exposed to Dynamic Changes in Temperature

TL;DR: This review has summarized published research concerning the tolerance of North American freshwater fishes to dynamic changes in temperature, i.e., tolerance is tested by methods that gradually change temperatures until biological stress is observed.
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