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2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.1911
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The freshwater landscape: lake, wetland, and stream abundance and connectivity at macroscales

Abstract: Inland water bodies and their surface hydrologic connections are active components in the landscape, influencing multiple ecological processes that can propagate to broad‐scale phenomena such as regional nutrient and carbon cycles and metapopulation dynamics. However, while lake, wetland, and stream abundance has been estimated at regional and global extents, less attention has been paid to freshwater connectivity attributes among aquatic systems at macroscales. Thus, regional to continental patterns of freshw… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(57 citation statements)
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References 77 publications
(199 reference statements)
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“…Glaciation can lead to relatively sharp patterns of connectivity. Similar to our analysis, Fergus et al (2017) analyzed lake, wetland, and stream connectivity at the southern extent of glaciation of Eastern North America. They found areas that had been covered by the continental ice sheet had more connected lakes and wetlands.…”
Section: Distribution Density and Size Of Habitatsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Glaciation can lead to relatively sharp patterns of connectivity. Similar to our analysis, Fergus et al (2017) analyzed lake, wetland, and stream connectivity at the southern extent of glaciation of Eastern North America. They found areas that had been covered by the continental ice sheet had more connected lakes and wetlands.…”
Section: Distribution Density and Size Of Habitatsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…For example, air temperature, precipitation, and water residence time influence runoff timing and volume. Watershed stream, wetland and lake abundance, and hydrologic connectivity may influence inflows of nutrients and metals to lakes (Fergus et al, 2017). Lake surface area may mediate ash deposition in lakes and lake morphometry may mediate lake thermal responses and internal nutrient cycling.…”
Section: Ecosystem-wide Implications Of Fire and The Importance Of mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…River networks and lakes/reservoirs are ubiquitous features of Earth's surface and global water cycle (Oki & Kanae, ). River networks form vast branching networks that connect continents to coasts (Allen & Pavelsky, ), and many lakes/reservoirs have a direct connection and are therefore part of the river network (Fergus et al, ; Hill et al, ; Lehner et al, ; Schmadel et al, ; Wetzel, ). However, descriptions of river network topology typically do not include connected lakes/reservoirs (Jones, ; Mark, ; Mark & Goodchild, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%