Title: SMALL ARTIFICAL WATER BODIES:
1SMALL ARTIFICAL WATER BODIES A NEGLECTED BUT
IMPORTANT FACTOR IN WATER SUPPLY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY R. W. Buddemeier1,2, R.
O. Sleezer3, D. P. Young1, S. Egbert2,4, F. J.
deNoyelles4,5, X. Zhan1, W. H. Renwick6, and S.
V. Smith7
1. Kansas Geological Survey2. Dept. of
Geography, KU3. Emporia State Univ.4. Kansas
Biological Survey KARS5. Dept. of Ecology
Evolutionary Biology, KU6. Miami Univ. (Ohio)7.
CICESE (Mexico)
Acknowledgements Technical contributions Z.
Andereck, , M. Dunbar, B.N. Mosiman, P. Taylor,
M. Houts, J. Vopata, E. Wilson Funding Kansas
NASA EPSCoR Program (KNEP) US NASA and KTEC
2Relatively large dams and reservoirs have been
extensively studied because of their effects on
water and sediment budgets at scales from
regional to global. Cumulatively, these
artificial water bodies are an important factor
in biogeochemical fluxes at global scales -- in
addition to providing water supplies that
profoundly influence patterns of development,
population and land use
3Small impoundments, which are many times more
numerous, have received little attention.
Recent studies have improved estimates of both
inventory and the importance of small water
bodies, and have been the basis for a
KNEP-sponsored project reported
here. Smith, S. V., Renwick, W. H.,
Buddemeier, R. W., and Crossland, C. J. 2001.
Budgets of soil erosion and deposition for
sediments and sedimentary organic carbon across
the conterminous United States. Global
Biogeochemical Cycles 15(3) 697-707 Smith, S.
V., Renwick, W. H., Bartley, J. D., and
Buddemeier, R. W. 2002. Distribution and
significance of small, artificial water bodies
across the United States landscape. The Science
of the Total Environment 29921-36 Renwick,
W.H., S.V. Smith, J.D. Bartley and R.W.
Buddemeier, in press. The Role of Small
Impoundments in the Sediment Budget of the
Conterminous United States. Geomorphology.
4What is the role of small impoundments on a local
scale?
- How many small impoundments exist, and what is
their distribution? - How have they developed over time?
- What ecological and water quality characteristics
can be determined remotely? - How best can local studies of detection and
functional description be used to calibrate and
upscale results to national and global scales?
5Detailed comparison of multiple generally
available and widely-used datasets along a
transect between 32o and 41oN resulted in the
refined estimate of small impoundment densities
and distributions mapped below (Smith et al. 2003)
6Small impoundments serve many water-related
functions directly, and have indirect influence
on others.
- FUNCTION
- Stock water supply
- Sediment and erosion control
- Water/environmental quality
- Fish production
- Recreation and aesthetics
- Habitat and conservation
- WATER SUPPLY ROLE
- Local source
- Reservoir/stream protection
- Reservoir/stream protection
- ---
- ---
- () Diversity (wetland)
- (-) Invasive and pest species
7Number and area of water bodies in various data
sets Mapped national density estimates were
developed by applying scaling factors from the
DLGs to the nationally available NLCD
- For comparison with these generally available
data sets, we sampled two E. KS quadrangles
(Midland and Allen SE) using - Landsat TM (30 m res.)
- ASTER (15 m)
- Duncan-Tech multi-spectral aerial photography (lt
1 m) - Available aerial photographs (DOQQs, crop slides,
archived county records, etc.) (lt 1 m) - We developed historical estimates of pond
development from the 1940s - and compared with NRCS and other recent detailed
coverages.
8Results detection and inventory (comparison
areas)
9Results time histories and total inventory
Two test Quadrangles Midland in SE Jefferson
Co., and Allen SE in NE Lyon Co. have similar
inventories, but rather different histories.
Allen SE, with generally stable population and
agricultural land use, showed an earlier onset of
pond building, which reached a plateau by
1960. Midland, with mixed and changing land use,
started later and has reached numbers similar to
Allen SE with a nearly linear increase.
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11Results ecological and biogeochemical function
Ground-truth comparisons have shown that
multi-spectral images can reliably identify many
aspects of water quality and pond ecology, as
well as characterizing the surrounding landscape.
False-color images of NE Kansas farm ponds taken
with the MS3100 multispectral camera. Left
moderately turbid water, some vegetation at
edges. Center clear water, little vegetation.
Right pond clogged with vegetation and sediment,
but with moderately clear water in places.
12Filtration and reaction biogeochemical effects
of pond density (W. H. Renwick)
13Relation between impoundment density and area
tributary to impoundments (W. H. Renwick)
DLG-based estimates lower than but comparable
to results of this study
Although the graphed points would have higher
densities if they were derived with our
techniques, the conclusion is inescapable most
of the area of E KS watersheds drains through one
or (often) more ponds before reaching a perennial
stream or a water body large enough to appear in
most of the statewide datasets or maps.
14Observations and Conclusions
- Millions of small artificial impoundments now dot
the landscape of the conterminous U.S., at an
average density of 0.3 per km2 but reaching
densities of gt5 per km2 in many regions. - -These represent profound alterations to the
landscape, mostly within the past 50 years. - -The norms used for the design of most major
reservoirs did not include the effects of these
ponds - Although relatively small in cumulative area and
volume, their high surface/volume ratio and
proximity to the source of runoff makes them
efficient distributed reactors. - -Calculations show they play a major role in
sediment and carbon sequestration effects on
dissolved chemicals are significant but more
difficult to estimate.
15Observations and Conclusions, continued
- The high concentration of ponds coincident with
the geographic transition from water surplus to
water testifies to their water supply functions. - -Considered alone, ponds have a beneficial
effect on downstream water quality, but they may
accompany or facilitate detrimental land uses. - The combination of remote sensing and modeling
with limited ground-truth calibration can
inventory and classify ponds, and evaluate their
landscape-scale effects on water quality and the
general ecosystem -- more to follow!