School of Natural Resources Seminar Series
Small, forested headwater streams and their riparia: are forest managers and ecologists ready for climate change?
3:30 pm –
4:30 pm
Hardin Hall
Room: 901 South
3310 Holdrege St
Lincoln NE 68583
Lincoln NE 68583
Additional Info: HARH
Contact:
Jess Corman, jcorman3@unl.edu
Presented by Leon Barmuta, School of Natural Sciences, University of Tasmania & Fulbright Scholar, Division of Biology, Kansas State University
Small headwater streams comprise as much as 40% of the catchment area of river basins, and are important for aquatic biodiversity, ecosystem processes and services. To mitigate changes in forest management, stream ecologists have obsessed about riparian protection, while hydrologists have obsessed about water yield and geomorphologists obsessed about managing source areas to minimise erosion. Meaningful connections between these disciplines have been difficult to forge and maintain thus hampering managers’ abilities to develop “joined-up” responses to changes in forest management. Perversely, the challenges presented by climate change might provoke more meaningful collaboration. In lutruwita/Tasmania, global heating won’t result in uniform drying of streams across the island. All models suggest strong regional differences in changes to precipitation. Some catchments may transition from permanent to intermittent streams while others will experience more frequent and intense high-flows. Accordingly, managers and researchers will need to modify the ‘one-size-fits-all’ set of prescriptions embodied in the current Forest Practices Code. However, our greatest ignorance is about the aquatic impacts of changes in fire regimes. Even if pre-European fire regimes were re-established, we face more frequent and intense fire seasons. Accordingly, I hope to use part of my Fulbright time here at KSU to break out of my forest silo and interact with stream and catchment researchers who work outside the forestry bubble and look forward to sharing hopes and fears for the ecology of small, headwater streams in the coming decades.
Speaker’s Biography
I am currently Associate Professor in Biological Sciences at the University of Tasmania and lead research programs in freshwater biodiversity, biological assessment of freshwaters and the limnology of shallow lakes. I am the Kansas State University Fulbright Scholar for 2020-2 (postponed until 2022). In 2013 I was awarded the Gold Medal of the Australian Society for Limnology and a National Citation for outstanding teaching from the Australian Government. I have close industry links with the water, forestry and primary industry sectors and am part of two major international research collaborations on biodiversity and ecosystem processes in freshwater streams.
Small headwater streams comprise as much as 40% of the catchment area of river basins, and are important for aquatic biodiversity, ecosystem processes and services. To mitigate changes in forest management, stream ecologists have obsessed about riparian protection, while hydrologists have obsessed about water yield and geomorphologists obsessed about managing source areas to minimise erosion. Meaningful connections between these disciplines have been difficult to forge and maintain thus hampering managers’ abilities to develop “joined-up” responses to changes in forest management. Perversely, the challenges presented by climate change might provoke more meaningful collaboration. In lutruwita/Tasmania, global heating won’t result in uniform drying of streams across the island. All models suggest strong regional differences in changes to precipitation. Some catchments may transition from permanent to intermittent streams while others will experience more frequent and intense high-flows. Accordingly, managers and researchers will need to modify the ‘one-size-fits-all’ set of prescriptions embodied in the current Forest Practices Code. However, our greatest ignorance is about the aquatic impacts of changes in fire regimes. Even if pre-European fire regimes were re-established, we face more frequent and intense fire seasons. Accordingly, I hope to use part of my Fulbright time here at KSU to break out of my forest silo and interact with stream and catchment researchers who work outside the forestry bubble and look forward to sharing hopes and fears for the ecology of small, headwater streams in the coming decades.
Speaker’s Biography
I am currently Associate Professor in Biological Sciences at the University of Tasmania and lead research programs in freshwater biodiversity, biological assessment of freshwaters and the limnology of shallow lakes. I am the Kansas State University Fulbright Scholar for 2020-2 (postponed until 2022). In 2013 I was awarded the Gold Medal of the Australian Society for Limnology and a National Citation for outstanding teaching from the Australian Government. I have close industry links with the water, forestry and primary industry sectors and am part of two major international research collaborations on biodiversity and ecosystem processes in freshwater streams.