1994
DOI: 10.1016/0160-4120(94)90062-0
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Identification of the riparian sources of aquatic dissolved organic carbon

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Cited by 69 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…This has resulted in several articles over the years and a development of a mechanistic understanding of the importance of the riparian zone as a source for the stream organic carbon and other chemical parameters, as well as how these elements are transported across the soil/stream interface (Bishop et al, 1995;Laudon et al, 2004b;Klaminder et al, 2006;Cory et al, 2007;Köhler et al, 2009;Öquist et al, 2009b). The riparian zone has been identified as the most important source of carbon in the study stream (Bishop et al, 1994;Köhler et al, 2009;Seibert et al, 2009) and in short, DOC concentration in the stream can be modeled based on the groundwater level (Fig. 2, left panel) and a schematic soil DOC gradient in the riparian soil (Fig.…”
Section: What Controls Stream Doc Concentrations During Snowmelt?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This has resulted in several articles over the years and a development of a mechanistic understanding of the importance of the riparian zone as a source for the stream organic carbon and other chemical parameters, as well as how these elements are transported across the soil/stream interface (Bishop et al, 1995;Laudon et al, 2004b;Klaminder et al, 2006;Cory et al, 2007;Köhler et al, 2009;Öquist et al, 2009b). The riparian zone has been identified as the most important source of carbon in the study stream (Bishop et al, 1994;Köhler et al, 2009;Seibert et al, 2009) and in short, DOC concentration in the stream can be modeled based on the groundwater level (Fig. 2, left panel) and a schematic soil DOC gradient in the riparian soil (Fig.…”
Section: What Controls Stream Doc Concentrations During Snowmelt?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our glaciated forested study catchment the riparian soils are the most important source of carbon (Bishop et al, 1994;Köhler et al, 2009;Seibert et al, 2009). A shallow water table adjacent to the stream results in anaerobic conditions with a low decomposition rate; hence resulting in a build-up of organic material which leads to a peat formation along the stream channel (Vidon et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hydrological mobilization from organic rich soils adjacent to streams is an important control on DOC dynamics in forest dominated boreal catchments (Winterdahl et al, 2011a). The riparian soil-stream interface is important for DOC production in boreal forest catchment due to the strong hydrological connectivity between soils, groundwater and surface waters (Bishop et al, 1994;Laudon et al, 2011). Riparian zones are characterized by wetter conditions than upland parts of a catchment (McGlynn and McDonnell, 2003) and can react rapidly to changing groundwater levels (Bishop et al, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the global relevance of increasing river nutrient concentrations, there is a critical need to develop a thorough mechanistic understanding of the variability and controls on nutrient mobilization and export from river catchments. In particular, identification of the dominant landscape source zones that contribute to nutrient export is often challenging [Bishop et al, 1994;Pacific et al, 2010;Grabs et al, 2012], despite the importance of this for their effective management.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%