J.L. Meyer’s research while affiliated with University of Georgia and other places

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Publications (1)


Streams in the Urban Landscape
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2001

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1,026 Reads

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3,201 Citations

Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics

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J.L. Meyer

The world's population is concentrated in urban areas. This change in demography has brought landscape transformations that have a number of documented effects on stream ecosystems. The most consistent and pervasive effect is an increase in impervious surface cover within urban catchments, which alters the hydrology and geomorphology of streams. This results in predictable changes in stream habitat. In addition to imperviousness, runoff from urbanized surfaces as well as municipal and industrial discharges result in increased loading of nutrients, metals, pesticides, and other contaminants to streams. These changes result in consistent declines in the richness of algal, invertebrate, and fish communities in urban streams. Although understudied in urban streams, ecosystem processes are also affected by urbanization. Urban streams represent opportunities for ecologists interested in studying disturbance and contributing to more effective landscape management.

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Citations (1)


... As such, it is no surprise that population density was of moderate to high importance in models predicting total pharmaceutical concentration and trimethoprim detection across BES streams (Figure 6f,h). Likewise, the links between watershed urbanization and nutrient concentrations in urban streams are well documented (e.g., Groffman et al., 2004;Paul & Meyer, 2001;Walsh et al., 2005), so the moderate to high importance of population density in models of nutrients ( Figure 4) is similarly unsurprising. ...

Reference:

Environmental conditions explain variability in concentrations of nutrients but not emerging contaminants
Streams in the Urban Landscape

Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics