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Using Diel Solute Signals to Assess Ecohydrological Processing in Lotic Systems

by Marie J Kurz, Julia Knapp
Publication Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
Page Numbers
265 to 295
Publisher Name
John Wiley & Sons
Publisher Location
Hoboken, New Jersey, United States of America

Lotic systems are a prominent ecohydrological interface within which complex, coupled interactions occur between ecological, hydrological, and geochemical processes. This chapter reviews the ecological processes driving diel signals in oxygen as well as major nutrients and other trace elements. It discusses how diel signals can be used to evaluate functioning and interactions within stream ecosystems. The chapter considers potential future research directions and outstanding questions still to be addressed by or about diel solute signals and associated processes. High-resolution sensor-based time series and associated tools and conceptual advances are being integrated into environmental management. Quantitative tools to disentangle diel biogeochemically-driven signals from other sources of variability in continuous time series are growing. Theoretical models of diel process dynamics are helping to spur hypothesis generation and new ways of approaching diel signals in lotic systems.