In the southeastern
Results/Conclusions
Hydrology was significantly affected by channelization treatments, especially streams with levees. The disconnected floodplains were drier, maintained higher nutrient pools, and were more productive than floodplains still connected to channel hydrology. Land use and flooding stress are suggested as causes of this pattern. Channel and floodplain hydrology were most strongly connected for unchannelized streams. Unchannelized streams were varied in soil redox potential, water table, and nutrient pools. Vegetation composition reflects both historical regimes and disturbances, and thus complex relationships to channel modifications. Results suggest both the subsidy (i.e., nutrient inputs) and the stress of flood events have been altered by anthropogenic activities, but these alterations were greatest in channelized systems compared to unchannelized systems. Both channelized and unchannelized streams (with channelized tributaries) suffer from high sedimentation inputs, adding additional stress during flood events, resulting in decreased decomposition rates, nutrient cycling, and productivity. Over time, deposition of the sediment within the floodplain system can bury forests and plug channels, severely altering the biotic composition, physical structure, and hydrology of floodplains.