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Page 1: Spatiotemporal chemical analysis of surface water and the ... · Spatiotemporal chemical analysis of surface water and the effects of precipitation in the pre-montane rainforest of

Spatiotemporal chemical analysis of surface water and the effects of

precipitation in the pre-montane rainforest of Costa Rica

C.Culver1,3 , G.Moore2, K.Brumbelow3, G.Miller3, M.Zapata3, S.Chellam3

Bowling Green State University, Department of Life Sciences 1 ; Texas A&M University , Department of Ecosystems Science and Management2 , Texas A&M University , Department of Civil Engineering3

Hypothesis

The four sites should show some variation, in pH,

turbidity, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, and

temperature. The streams and rivers have different

structure and surroundings that contribute to its

chemistry. The precipitation should also decrease pH

and conductivity.

Figure 7: Stream beneath WeirFigure 8: Stream beneath waterfall

Figure 9: Chachagua River Figure 10: Penas Blancas RiverFigure 11: Deploying sonde

Results

Methods• Determined site location (to get variation in stream

type and appearance). Two streams and two rivers

were selected. Out of the two rivers one was large

and one was small. Out of the two streams one had

a waterfall, and the other had a weir construction

upstream.

• Programmed the YSI to collect unattended samples

every 30 minutes for 4 days

• Made note of qualitative data around sites

• Recorded latitude and longitude of site and took

pictures

• DO and Ph were calibrated in between each site

• Deployed the YSI instrument by securing to a

nearby rock or log with a rope in stream/river (made

certain it was fully submerged in the water).

Retrieved instrument, then moved to next site:

Dates of Data Collection

Site 1 6/16/19-6/19/19 Howler Monkey Stream/ Weir

Site 2 6/21/19-6/24/19 Stream beneath waterfall

Site 3 7/01/19-7/04/19 Chachagua River

Site 4 7/07/19-7/10/19 Penas Blancas River

Acknowledgements- Funding for this Research Experiences for Undergraduate

program is provided by the National Science Foundation’s

Division of Earth Sciences (EAR-1659848)-

Objective• Test dissolved oxygen (DO) ,pH, turbidity,

temperature, and conductivity at four different sites

for four days each

• Analyze precipitation patterns during the time period

the water was tested

Research Questions• Do streams that are in similar environments have

similar or different surface water chemistry?

• How does the precipitation in a rainforest climate

affect the surface water chemistry?

IntroductionWithin the pristine rainforest of San Isidro, Penas

Blancas region of Costa Rica many of the streams and

rivers have similar environmental surroundings. They all

have similar surrounding vegetation and air temperature

and are within the premontane area as well. This data

will give insight on surface water chemistry trends in the

rainforest.

Table 1- Relationship between DO and temperature at sunrise, and

sunset.

Conclusion

Contrary to the hypothesis, precipitation did not affect the pH and

conductivity. Despite the sites being in a rainforest; the amount of

rainfall was insufficient to cause any drastic changes. There were

some differences in DO, temperature, turbidity, and conductivity

between the sites which supports the hypothesis.

This data shows how different features and structural variations of

surface water can change their chemistry even if they are all in a

rainforest ecosystem.

This information can be useful with determining ideal areas to get

fresh water for human use (based on pH values). The varying

water chemistry can also support how much biodiversity the Costa

Rican premontane rainforest can sustain as well.

Figure 1

Figure 2

Figure 3

Figure 4

Figure 5

Figure 6

Discussion

• As temperature decreases, the maximum amount of dissolved

oxygen that water can be saturated with increases.(Table 1)

• Conductivity levels in the Penas Blancas river, are credited to

the volcanic rocks present in the river that increase ion

concentration.( Figure 1)

• Turbidity in the stream beneath the weir were significantly higher

than the other sites (Figure 2). So a log scale was needed to

combine the values on the same graph . Construction was going

on upstream which resulted in more debris flowing through the

water.

• The maximum amount of rainfall was only 34 mm (Figure 6)

so precipitation didn’t effect the water chemistry as expected.

Results Cont.

0.01

0.1

1

10

100

1000

Turb

idity

(NT

U)

Days

Daily Avg. Turbidity

Weir Waterfall Chachagua Penas Blancas

7.2

7.3

7.4

7.5

7.6

7.7

7.8

7.9

8

8.1

1 2 3 4

pH

Days

Daily Avg. pH

Weir Waterfall Chachagua Penas Blancas

7

7.5

8

8.5

9

9.5

10

10.5

11

11.5

12

1 2 3 4

DO

(m

g/L

)

Days

Daily Avg. Dissolved Oxygen

Weir Waterfall Chachagua Penas Blancas

0

0.01

0.02

0.03

0.04

0.05

0.06

0.07

0.08

0.09

0.1

0.11

0.12

0.13

0.14

0.15

1 2 3 4

Spcond (

mS

/cm

)

Days

Daily Avg. SpCond

Weir Waterfall Chachagua Penas Blancas

21

21.5

22

22.5

23

23.5

1 2 3 4

Tem

pera

ture

C)

Days

Daily Avg. Temperature

Weir Waterfall Chachagua Penas Blancas

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