Effects of Urbanization and Land Cover Change on Streamflow in Maine
Photo: Bing bird’s eye view Photo: USGS
Photo: USGSPhoto: USGS
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Presentation Overview
• Background– Population & land cover change in Maine– Effects of altered stream flow
• Study Areas– Where and why?
• Data Sources• Methods & Analysis
– IHA– Modifying land cover based on population– Linear regressions
• Potential Challenges
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Has Development in Southern Maine Resulted in Altered Stream Flows?
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
This project will seek to answer the following question:
“Is there a correlation between urban development and altered stream flow characteristics in Southern Maine as compared to Northern Maine, where development has been much more limited?”
? ?
Photo: Bing bird’s eye view
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Southern & Coastal Maine is Urbanizing, Northern Maine is Remaining Rural
• 1980 – 2000: Maine population increased 3.8%
• York County (southernmost) increased 13%
• Aroostook County (northernmost) decreased almost 15%
Data Source: US Census Bureau
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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Southern & Coastal Maine is Urbanizing, Northern Maine is Remaining Rural
• 1960 – 2000: Maine population increased 31.5%
• York County (southernmost) increased 87%
• Aroostook County (northernmost) decreased 30%
Data Source: US Census Bureau
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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Altered stream flows have ecological impacts
– Intra-annual variation is important to the life cycles of many aquatic, riparian and wetland species (Richter et al)
•Altered hydrology effects this variation and habitat characteristics through peak/minimum flows, water temperature, oxygen content, sediment
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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Study Area: ~25 Catchments in Northern and Southern Maine
• DRAFT watersheds – Canadian/NH data?
• Southern and coastal counties tend to have a greater % of impervious surface (developed)
• Small watersheds where possible – stronger response signal to land cover (Poff et al).
• Limited by gage records
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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All Data Publicly Available on the Internet
• Streamflow data– USGS Daily Streamflow Data
• Land cover data– 2001 NLCD– 2004 MELCD– NOAA C-CAP 1985, 1993, 1996, 2001,
2006 (some years coastal portions only)– 1993 GAP– *USGS Land Cover Trends Data
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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Altered stream flows have ecological impacts
– The “Indicators of Hydrologic Alteration” (IHA) toolkit, developed by a team at The Nature Conservancy will be used to look for ecologically significant changes in hydrology over time
– (http://www.nature.org/initiatives/freshwater/conservationtools/art17004.html)
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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IHA Will be Used to Evaluate Ecologically Significant Hydrologic Changes Over Time
• Hydrologic Indicators are all derived from Daily Mean Data (Available online from USGS)
• 32 Indicators broken into 5 categories– Timing of annual extreme conditions– Magnitude of monthly water condition
– Frequency and Duration of high and low pulses– Magnitude and Duration of a annual extreme
conditions – Rate and frequency of water condition change
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Photo: USGS Wisconsin Water Science Center
Photo: USGS California
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IHA Will be Used to Evaluate Ecologically Significant Hydrologic Changes Over Time
• 32 Indicators broken into 5 categories– Magnitude of monthly water condition– Timing of annual extreme conditions
– Frequency and Duration of high and low pulses– Magnitude and Duration of a annual extreme conditions – Rate and frequency of water condition change
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
•Soil moisture stress for plants
•Availability of floodplain habitats for aquatic organisms
•Nutrient and organic matter exchanges between river and floodplain
•Access for waterbirds to feeding, resting, reproduction sites
•Influences bedload transport, channel sediment textures, and duration of substrate disturbance (high pulses)
Adapted from: The Nature Conservancy, 2007. Indicators of Hydrologic Alteration Version 7 User's Manual
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IHA Will be Used to Evaluate Ecologically Significant Hydrologic Changes Over Time
• 32 Indicators broken into 5 categories– Magnitude of monthly water condition– Timing of annual extreme conditions
– Frequency and Duration of high and low pulses
– Magnitude and Duration of annual extreme conditions
– Rate and frequency of water condition change
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Adapted from: The Nature Conservancy, 2007. Indicators of Hydrologic Alteration Version 7 User's Manual
• Creation of sites for plant colonization
•Soil moisture stress in plants
•Anaerobic stress in plants
•Duration of stressful conditions such as low oxygen an concentrated chemicals in aquatic environments
•Distribution of plant communities in lakes, ponds, floodplains
•Duration of high flows for waste disposal, aeration of spawning beds in channel sediments
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IHA Will be Used to Evaluate Ecologically Significant Hydrologic Changes Over Time
• 32 Indicators broken into 5 categories– Magnitude of monthly water condition– Timing of annual extreme conditions
– Frequency and Duration of high and low pulses– Magnitude and Duration of a annual extreme conditions – Rate and frequency of water condition
change
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Adapted from: The Nature Conservancy, 2007. Indicators of Hydrologic Alteration Version 7 User's Manual
•Drought stress on plants (falling levels)
•Entrapment of organisms on islands, floodplains (rising levels)
•Desiccation stress on low-mobility streamedge organisms
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Population data will be used to modify land cover: a proxy for early decades
– Ideal: Compare land cover data to stream flow data for each decade back to ~1960’s
– Reality: Compare stream gage to land cover where available, use population as a proxy for other time periods
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
site_no station_nm dateMean Discharge
ft3 per sec01064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 01-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 02-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 03-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 04-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 05-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 06-Oct-01 28301064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 07-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 08-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 09-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 10-Oct-01 647
site_no station_nm dateMean Discharge
ft3 per sec01064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 01-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 02-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 03-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 04-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 05-Oct-01 65001064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 06-Oct-01 28301064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 07-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 08-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 09-Oct-01 64701064000 PRESUMPSCOT RIVER AT 10-Oct-01 647
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Establish relationship between stream flow
and land cover for available years
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Portland - % Developed Landcover Cells
0.3
0.35
0.4
0.45
0.5
0.55
0.6
1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Portland 1986 Portland 2006
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Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Portland 1993 Portland 1996Portland 1986 Portland 2001 Portland 2006
Establish relationship between population
change and land cover change
Metro Portland Population1980: 197,9381990: 221,0692000: 243,537
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Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Establish relationship between population
change and land cover change Portland - % Developed Landcover Cells
0.3
0.35
0.4
0.45
0.5
0.55
0.6
1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
~20% increasePopulation Change, Portland Metro area
170000
190000
210000
230000
250000
270000
1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
~23% increase
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Establish relationship between population change and land cover
change
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Biddeford Population 1980 – 2000 = + 20 %Biddeford Developed 1980 – 2000 = +8%
To illustrate the point with mock data…
Biddeford Population 1960 – 1980 = + 40 %Biddeford Developed 1960 – 1980 = +16%
If…
Then…
Simple linear relationship
(Lopez et al in Mexico)
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Use population data to modify landcover in the GIS
• Rather than a binary developed / undeveloped classification, class as low, medium and high intensity development (1, 2, 3)
• Take the mean score for the watershed of interest (the maximum possible would = 3, where all cells are high intensity development
• Multiply developed score by the % established relative to the population change % on a cell-by-cell basis• When developed cells are summarized by watershed, the % change for any given political area will be
reflected in the watershed, even when the boundaries are totally different• On the down side, undeveloped areas stay undeveloped.
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Mean Score = 0.45
Known Landcover Development Values
Auburn + 0.5%
Mean Score = 0.7
Lewiston + 1%
Estimated Development Values Based on Pop. Growth
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The modified landcover can then be used to represent years with no other land cover data
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Portland 1993 Portland 1996Portland 1986 Portland 2001 Portland 2006
Portland 1940Portland 1980For example…
(using mock data)
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• Watershed – by - Watershed– For each hydrologic characteristic
examined, a map depicting study watersheds symbolized by linear regression results
– Tables and graphs further detailing these relationships for subject watersheds
• Statistical comparison of southern vs. northern watersheds
Final products will include maps and graphs summarizing results
Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
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How to account for other variables? Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
Photo: Friends of Sebago Lake
Dam!•Most are older than 1960’s
•Most streams with gages have at least 1 (especially in southern Maine)
•Accounting for them is beyond the scope of this project and could be a potential future refinement
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How to account for other variables? Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
•Too much static?
•All told, Maine is still relatively undeveloped – will there be a development signature?
•Results can not be considered definitive, given the use of population as a proxy for development.
•Next steps: historic aerials?
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References Background Study Area Data Methods/Analysis Potential Challenges
•Lopez, Erna; Gerardo Bocco, Manual Mendoza, Emilio Duau. Predicting land-cover and land-use change in the urban fringe: A case in Morelia city, Mexico . Landscape and Urban Planning. Vol 55 Issue 4. August 2001.
•Poff, LeRopy, Brian Bledsoe, Christopher Cuhaciyan. Hydrologic variation with land use across the contiguous United States: Geomorphic and ecological consequences for stream ecosystems. Geomorphology Vol 79. pp 264-285. 2006.
•Richter BD, Baumgartner JV, Powell J, Braun DP. A method for assessing hydrologic alterationwithin ecosystems. Conservat Biol 1996;10(4):1163–74.
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• Thank you!
• Questions / Comments?
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