Ever wonder
how we get the best, cleanest drinking water for everyone or what type of land
cover/use provides the cleanest? Is it a watershed full of concrete, grass, or
trees? What are the benefits of each one? If it is a forest, could we find one
species of tree that gave us the best, cleanest drinking water?
These might
seem like big or abstract thoughts - but they are important to think about in
the big picture. The folks at the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory and the US Forest
Service help figure out the answer to these questions and more.
The “Coweeta
Experimental Forest,” was established in 1934 near Otto, North Carolina in the Southern
Appalachians. The site was later renamed the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory. Early
research focused on establishing baseline measurements of climate, streamflow,
and forest growth. Subsequent research established fundamental relationships
among vegetation (for example, type, successional stage), soils, abiotic
factors, and streamflow, further strengthening our understanding of the
hydrologic cycle in watersheds.
Research at
Coweeta represents a continuum of theory, experimentation, and application
using watersheds as landscape units. The underlying philosophies that have guided
their research include:
1. The
quantity, timing, and quality of streamflow provides an integrated measurement
of the success or failure of land-management activities
2. Good
resource management is synonymous with good ecosystem management. Ecosystem
response to disturbance has been a focal point for interpreting ecosystem
behavior.
This Untamed Science video explores the Forest Service's Coweeta Experimental Forest, examines how watersheds provide drinking water, and investigates what land uses provide the cleanest water.
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