ANALYSIS AND MODELING OF LONG‐TERM STREAM TEMPERATURES ON THE STEAMBOAT CREEK BASIN, OREGON: IMPLICATIONS FOR LAND USE AND FISH HABITAT

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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Steamboat Creek basin is an important source of timber and provides crucial spawning and rearing habitat for anadromous steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Because stream temperatures are near the upper limit of tolerance for the survival of juvenile steelhead, the possible long‐term effect of clear‐cut logging on stream temperatures was assessed. Twenty‐year (1969–1989) records of summer stream temperature and flow from four tributaries and two reaches of Steamboat Creek and Boulder Creek (a nearby unlogged watershed) were analyzed. Logging records for the Steamboat Creek basin and air temperature records also were used in the analysis. A time‐series model of the components of stream temperature (seasonal cycle of solar radiation, air temperature, streamflow, an autoregressive term of order 1, and a linear trend variable) was fitted to the water‐temperature data. The linear trend variable was significant in all the fitted models except Bend Creek (a tributary fed by cool ground‐water discharge) and Boulder Creek. Because no trends in either climate (i.e., air temperature) or streamflow were found in the data, the trend variable was associated with the pre‐1969 loss and subsequent regrowth of riparian vegetation and shading canopies. Copyright © 1991, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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Hostetler, S. W. (1991). ANALYSIS AND MODELING OF LONG‐TERM STREAM TEMPERATURES ON THE STEAMBOAT CREEK BASIN, OREGON: IMPLICATIONS FOR LAND USE AND FISH HABITAT. JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 27(4), 637–647. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1752-1688.1991.tb01465.x

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