Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Report: Habitat along river is changing

Upper Mississipp­i hit by prolonged flooding

- Madeline Heim

High water and longer-lasting flooding are changing the habitat along the Upper Mississipp­i River, according to a new report analyzing nearly 30 years of data.

The upper basin is the natural floodplain that spans from Minnesota through Wisconsin and Iowa to Cairo, Illinois. It’s an ecological­ly diverse area, consisting of wetlands, marshes and forests.

The report, released last week, shows increasing­ly wetter conditions in the Upper Mississipp­i over the past few decades, a trend that — spurred by climate change and land-use practices — looks likely to continue.

The report was conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, Army Corps of Engineers and Upper Mississipp­i River Basin Associatio­n. It is the third of its kind produced by the Upper Mississipp­i River Restoratio­n program, which was created in 1986 to conduct long-term monitoring of the basin and focus on habitat rehabilita­tion.

Kirsten Wallace, executive director of the Upper Mississipp­i River Basin Associatio­n, said the findings are a good start to understand­ing what has impacted the river habitat.

“Clean water management techniques that we’ve put on the landscape have worked,” Wallace said, but “the changing climate and changing hydrology makes the future unknown even though we have these long-term trends.”

Other organizati­ons study and publish reports on the river, such as America’s Watershed Initiative, which issued a C- grade for the health of the entire basin in its 2020 report card, citing environmen­tal pollution, runoff from farmland and ongoing funding needs for aging locks, dams and ports.

Wallace said this report can help people understand how the river has changed in different places over time.

“The river is complex, side to side even, north to south,” Wallace said. “It just changes all the time, so you can’t just say that the river is bad. You can’t just say that the river is good.”

Previous reports were released in 1998 and 2008. But the new analysis — spanning decades and examining more than 800 miles of river — can provide a clearer picture, said Jeff Houser, a USGS research ecologist and science director of the long-term resources monitoring program.

“By having a long-term data set over a lot of space, we can really begin to understand many aspects of (the river’s) changes,” Houser said.

Here is a look at some of the report’s key findings.

There’s more water in the river and flooding lasts longer

Higher discharge, or put simply, more water running through the river, was the most widespread change observed throughout the Upper Mississipp­i River system, the report’s authors wrote.

Climate change — which causes heavier rainfall, more snow and higher temperatur­es — as well as land use practices and built constraint­s like levees all play a role, according to the report, though it’s not entirely understood how much each is contributi­ng.

The upper Midwest is projected to get wetter into the future, particular­ly during winter and spring, according to the report. And along the river, an increase in surfaces that are impervious — meaning they don’t allow water to seep through and soak into the ground

— is forcing more water into the river and its tributarie­s.

Levees and floodwalls that have been built to prevent flooding have also cut off many wetland areas from the rest of the ecosystem, decreasing ecological diversity. This is more of a problem in the lower portion of the upper basin, in Missouri, Illinois and Iowa, where at least 50% of the river is constraine­d by levees.

Floodplain forest cover is declining

Most sections of the Upper Mississipp­i River lost forest cover over the last roughly three decades, largely due to flooding and invasive species, the report found.

Trees along the river are used to some flooding, but when their trunks and roots are submerged for long periods, they suffer and sometimes die, Houser said.

When the trees die, invasive species move in, such as reed canarygras­s and Japanese hops — both of which grow so rapidly they can suppress the growth of new trees. The emerald ash borer is also threatenin­g green ash trees, one of the more abundant species in the floodplain.

Researcher­s are exploring ways to protect floodplain forests, but Houser said it may be easier to focus on controllin­g invasive species than addressing tree loss from excess flooding — which could happen more frequently in the future as the planet warms.

One stretch of the upper river, between the Missouri and Ohio rivers, bucks this trend. More trees are growing in the floodplain, and Houser said they’re not sure why.

In some areas, water clarity improves, but runoff concentrat­ion remains high

Typically, the more water draining off the land, the faster it flows. Houser said that usually carries more sediment and nutrient runoff from farm fields, which can kill plants in the river and ultimately contribute to the Dead Zone, the low-oxygen area at the mouth of the river in the Gulf of Mexico.

But in the upper stretches of the system, the picture is more complicate­d: aquatic plants are thriving and water clarity has improved despite higher discharge. There was a small but significant decrease in total suspended solids, particles — like sand and dirt — suspended in the water, and a decrease in total phosphorus, which tends to stick to those particles.

There are many state and federal programs working to reduce farm runoff throughout the upper Midwest, and the findings may illustrate that some of those efforts are working, Houser said. Aquatic plants, which have rebounded following a widespread loss in the 1980s, can also slow down water velocity and help sediment settle. In turn, clearer water allows sunlight to reach plants and promotes growth. “It seems that the vegetation itself is helping to further clarify the water,” he said.

Further down the river, aquatic vegetation is more scarce. And even with the observed decreases, runoff concentrat­ion still exceeds U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency benchmarks, according to the report.

In places where invasive carp have taken hold, they’re dominating

Silver carp and bighead carp, which were first identified in the Upper Mississipp­i River in the 1990s, now represent up to 65% of the fish in three of the southernmo­st study areas.

Invasive carp are “prolific reproducer­s” that can breed many generation­s of fish in a year, Houser said.

They’re more efficient feeders than most native fish and also eat plankton, which all young fish eat and some fish eat their entire lives. Thus they can clear much of the food out of the water directly in competitio­n with other fish.

Popular sport fish species have declined in the lower portions of the system, as well as forage fish, which represent the middle of the food chain.

It’s unclear whether invasive carp will be able to take hold in the upper stretches of the river, where they’ve been found but have not yet begun to dominate, Houser said. Some environmen­tal advocacy groups have pushed for a sound barrier to be installed in the water further upriver to discourage carp from getting through.

This story is a product of the Mississipp­i River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an editoriall­y independen­t reporting network based at the University of Missouri School of Journalism in partnershi­p with Report For America and funded by the Walton Family Foundation. Madeline Heim is a Report for America corps reporter who writes about environmen­tal challenges in the Mississipp­i River watershed and across Wisconsin. Contact her at 920-996-7266 or mheim@gannett.com.

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI AND CHELSEY LEWIS/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? The Mississipp­i River looking north along the Great River Road in Lynxville. A report shows increasing­ly wetter conditions in the Upper Mississipp­i.
MIKE DE SISTI AND CHELSEY LEWIS/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL The Mississipp­i River looking north along the Great River Road in Lynxville. A report shows increasing­ly wetter conditions in the Upper Mississipp­i.

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