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Ronan Abhervé

and 6 more

Non-perennial streams play a crucial role in ecological communities. However, the key parameters and processes involved in stream intermittence remain poorly understood. While climate conditions, geology and land use are well identified, assessing and modeling the groundwater controls on streamflow intermittence remains a challenge. In this study, we explore new opportunities to calibrate process-based 3D groundwater flow models designed to simulate stream intermittence in groundwater-fed headwaters. Streamflow measurements and stream network maps are jointly considered to constrain aquifer’s effective hydraulic properties in hydrogeological models. The simulations were then validated using visual observations presence/absence of water, provided by a national monitoring network in France (ONDE). We tested the methodology on two pilot catchments with unconfined shallow crystalline aquifer, the Canut and Nançon (Brittany, France). We found that streamflow and expansion/contraction dynamics of the stream network are both necessary to calibrate simultaneously hydraulic conductivity K and porosity θ with low uncertainties. Conversely, calibration resulted in accurate prediction of stream intermittence - in terms of flow and spatial extent. For the two catchments studied, the Canut and Nançon, hydraulic conductivity is close reaching 1.5 x 10 -5 m/s and 4.5 x 10 -5 m/s respectively. However, they differ more by their storage capacity, with porosity estimated at 0.1 % and 2.2 % respectively. Lower storage capacities lead to higher fluctuations in the water table, increasing the proportion of intermittent streams and reducing perennial flow. This new modeling framework allowing to predict streamflow intermittence in headwaters can be deployed to improve our understanding of groundwater controls in different geomorphological, geological, and climatic contexts. It will benefit from advances in remote sensing and crowdsourcing approaches that generate new observed data products with high spatial and temporal resolution.

Romain Sarremejane

and 10 more

Disturbance and connectivity control biodiversity, ecosystem functioning and their interactions across connected aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, that form a meta-ecosystem. In rivers, detrital organic matter (OM) is transported across terrestrial-aquatic boundaries and along the river network and decomposed on the way by diverse communities of organisms, including microorganisms and invertebrates. Drying naturally fragments most river networks and thereby modify organism dispersal and OM transfers across ecosystems. This may prevent organisms from reaching and consuming OM, generating mismatches between community composition and decomposition. However, little evidence of the effects of drying on river network-scale OM cycling exists. Here, we aim to examine the effects of fragmentation by drying on the structure of consumer communities and ecosystem functioning within interacting aquatic-terrestrial river ecosystems. We monitored leaf resource stocks, invertebrate communities and decomposition rates in the instream and riparian habitats of 20 sites in a river network naturally fragmented by drying. Although instream resource quantity and quality increased with drying severity, decomposition decreased due to changes in invertebrate communities and particularly leaf-decomposer abundance. Invertebrate-driven decomposition peaked at intermediate levels of upstream connectivity, suggesting that intermediate levels of fragmentation can promote the functioning of downstream ecosystems. We found that the variability in community composition was unrelated to variability in decomposition at sites with low connectivity and high drying severity, suggesting that such conditions can promote mismatches between community composition and decomposition. Decomposition instream was correlated to decomposition in the riparian area, revealing one of the first network-scale evidence of the links between ecosystem functions across terrestrial-aquatic boundaries. Our river network-scale study thus demonstrates the paramount effect of drying on the dynamics of resources, communities and ecosystem functioning in river networks, with crucial implications for the adaptive management of river networks and preservation of their functional integrity.