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1 September 2010 Reduction of High Nitrate Concentrations in a Central New York State Stream Impounded by Beaver
Richard Lawrence Klotz
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Abstract

The influence of Castor canadensis (North American Beaver) impoundments on the loss of nitrate (NO3-) from stream water was monitored for 14 months at four sites in Homer Gulf Creek in central New York State. A relatively high NO3- concentration of 1.56 (0.14) mg N/L (mean (SEM)) at the upstream site was reduced by a daily average of 35.5% as the water passed through the beaver ponds. There was a significant difference (P < 0.001) in the mean values among the four sites, and significant differences were measured between the upstream site and each of the three downstream sites. The reduction in NO3- within the upstream beaver pond was significantly (P = 0.005) greater during the warmer months (April–September) of the study vs. the October–March period, suggesting biological processes were responsible. Stream water NO3- may have been transformed through biological processes, including the microbial process of denitrification, enhanced in the beaver ponds as a result of anoxic sediments, sufficient supplies of labile organic matter, and increased water residence time.

Richard Lawrence Klotz "Reduction of High Nitrate Concentrations in a Central New York State Stream Impounded by Beaver," Northeastern Naturalist 17(3), 349-356, (1 September 2010). https://doi.org/10.1656/045.017.0301
Published: 1 September 2010
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