Title | Do Vigorous Young Forests Reduce Streamflow? Results from up to 54 Years of Streamflow Records in Eight Paired-Watershed Experiments in the H. J. Andrews and South Umpqua Experimental Forests |
Publication Type | Thesis |
Year of Publication | 2007 |
Authors | Perry, Timothy D. |
Academic Department | Dept. of Geosciences, Geography |
Degree | M.S. |
Pagination | 135 p. |
University | Oregon State University |
City | Corvallis, Or. |
Type of Work | Masters Thesis |
Call Number | OSU Libraries: Digital Open Access |
Keywords | Coyote Creek, Douglas fir = Pseudotsuga menziesii, growth, H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest, hydrology, logging, precipitation, South Umpqua Experimental Forest, South Umpqua River, streamflow, terrestrial vegetation, Umpqua River Basin |
Notes | M.S. thesis. Do different logging techniques affect post-logging streamflow? Do younger trees require more water (and therefore decrease streamflow) than more mature trees? (Yes and yes.) This most interesting thesis recounts results from paired-watershed studies with over 54 years of data. |
URL | https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/kw52jb752 |