Water-quality improvement of an agricultural watershed marsh after macrophyte establishment and point-source reduction

Wetlands
By: , and 

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Abstract

Green Lake, located in central Wisconsin USA within a watershed with land use dominated by agriculture, is listed as impaired under Sect. 303(d) of the Clean Water Act. The primary tributary, Silver Creek, is also impaired because of high total phosphorus (TP) concentrations. Silver Creek flows through a shallow marsh before reaching the lake. Prior to 2006, the marsh was turbid and free of macrophytes. Efforts to restrict carp (Cyprinus carpio) in the marsh and reduce the primary upstream phosphorus point source, resulted in the marsh becoming a clear-water, macrophyte-dominated system.

The point source reduction and marsh phytoplankton-to-macrophyte shift reduced the export of TP and suspended sediment (SS). These measured reductions at the marsh outlet exceeded the documented reductions in the upstream point source suggesting that the shift to a macrophyte-dominated system drove part of the TP reductions. TP loads at the marsh outlet significantly decreased in all seasons; however, SS loads significantly decreased in all seasons except winter, suggesting the vegetation shift was an important driver for these reductions. During 2012–2017, the marsh served as an overall sink for TP and SS, retaining on average 1.59 kg/day and 0.95 MT/day, respectively. Overall, this study documents benefits of a multi-stakeholder, collaborative ecological effort to restore a marsh from a turbid system to a macrophyte-dominated system, which resulted in significant reductions in downstream TP and SS loading to a major inland lake. This effort may serve as a model for similar restorations in other watersheds with land use dominated by agriculture.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Water-quality improvement of an agricultural watershed marsh after macrophyte establishment and point-source reduction
Series title Wetlands
DOI 10.1007/s13157-022-01649-0
Volume 42
Year Published 2022
Language English
Publisher Springer
Contributing office(s) Upper Midwest Water Science Center
Description 129, 13 p.
Country United States
State Wisconsin
Other Geospatial Green Lake
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