Impact of Euro-American settlement on a riparian landscape in northeast Iowa, midwestem USA: an integrated approach based on historical evidence, floodplain sediments, fossil pollen, plant macrofossils and insects

Author:

Baker R.G.1,Schwert D.P.2,Bettis E.A.3,Chumbley C.A.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242-1379, USA

2. Department of Geosciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota 58105-5517, USA

3. Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Geological Survey Bureau, 123 N Capitol, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA

4. 412 Highland Avenue, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA

Abstract

European settlement and attendant forest clearance and agricultural activities in northeastern Iowa caused changes in the landscape, vegetation, insect fauna and water quality unequalled in rate and magnitude since the melting of Wisconsinan glaciers. Historical documents show that the upper part of the Roberts Creek drainage basin was settled between AD 1840 and 1856, and the area was under intensive cultivation by 1880. Extensive soil erosion beginning at this time resulted in increased runoff and more frequent flooding; aggradation rates increased by one to two orders of magnitude over those in presettlement times, and the entire floodplain was covered with up to 1 m of sediment. Channel widening between about 1880 and 1930 allowed the stream to accommodate greater floods, overbank deposition decreased, and further deposits were restricted mostly to the channel belt. The presettlement vegetation was a stable mix of wet meadows and riparian shrubs on the floodplain, a rich aquatic community in the stream, and oak savanna on the valley walls and upland. Disturbance from soil erosion, floodplain erosion and floodplain deposition almost completely replaced both lowland and upland communities with ruderal (disturbed ground) plants, many of them introduced weeds. Regional insect communities were simultaneously affected by changes in land use. The presettlement aquatic beetle fauna was dominated by species of dryopoid beetles that today inhabit only streams of high water quality. Terrestrial beetle taxa included species of undisturbed grasslands and riparian forest. The changes in the landscape resulted in a decrease in the diversity of terrestrial beetle taxa and caused the near total elimination of dryopoid beetles in stream waters. Dominating the historic assemblages are beetles associated with dung, polluted waters and cultivated plants, including host-specific immigrant beetle species that are associated with immigrant plant species.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference67 articles.

1. Ashworth, A.C. 1979: A method of recovering fossil insect remains from clays, peats, and silts. In Erwin, T.L., Ball, G.E. and Whitehead, D.R. editors, Carabid beetles, their evolution, natural history, and classification, The Hague: W. Junk, 406.

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