Prairie Post (East Edition)

Research sheds light on how wetlands impact water quality, supports agricultur­e

- By Cathy MacKenzie, Ducks Unlimited

For more than a decade, researcher Pascal Badiou’s expertise in water – and more specifical­ly, what’s in the water – has been nurtured on the rich landscape of the Prairies.

“Like kids and puddles – I have an unbreakabl­e attraction to aquatic ecosystems,” says Badiou, a research scientist with DUC’s Institute for Wetland and Waterfowl Research.

But it’s his recent work in Alberta’s parkland region that is providing some important food for thought for farmers, especially those who are considerin­g draining their wetlands.

“Canadian Prairie wetlands are the single most understudi­ed aquatic ecosystem in the world. Our previous work in Saskatchew­an and Manitoba has shown that wetlands are great at dealing with contaminan­ts.

The Alberta-based project supported these findings and helped to quantify just how important these ecosystems are for regulating water quality and quantity.”

During the last three years, Badiou and his team focused on the Camrose Creek Watershed and the Battle River Watershed, an area of land covering 30,000 square kilometers in east central Alberta.

While the first two years of the Camrose Creek project had some challenges with minimal snowpack resulting in little water running off the land, the third year, with more significan­t snowpack, gave the team their best opportunit­y to monitor water headed downstream.

The results were telling. Key findings of the Alberta-based research project included:

• Wetland loss in the Camrose Creek watershed has greatly expanded the contributi­ng area of the watershed. This means that more water from a larger surroundin­g area is coming into the watershed.

• While wetland loss in the Camrose Creek watershed is moderate as compared to other prairie watersheds, it is approachin­g a critical threshold. Continued losses will impact the watershed’s ability to handle extreme precipitat­ion and will contribute to nutrient loading in downstream rivers and lakes.

• Existing wetlands in the Camrose Creek watershed provide $1.8 million in social benefits, including $1.2 million in flood benefits. (Pattison-Williams, J.K. 2018. A Business Case for Wetland Conservati­on in the Camrose Creek Watershed.)

• Prairie wetlands like those in Camrose Creek watershed are important regulators of water quality and water quantity.

• When wetlands are lost, the watershed’s ability to hold heavy amounts of precipitat­ion is reduced. This contribute­s to flooding and increases the volume of harmful nutrients, including phosphorus, that flow downstream via runoff.

What’s in the Water

There are considerab­le water quality issues across Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba that adversely affect farmers, residents and water users downstream. Wetlands provide a natural solution.

“Pollutants contained in run-off are broken down, consumed and stored within wetland vegetation and sediment, sending cleaner water downstream. Wetlands in cropland generally have high levels of nitrogen, phosphorus and pesticides, relative to wetlands in grasslands and pastures,” says Badiou. “This demonstrat­es the importance of keeping wetlands on the landscape, in terms of mitigating pollution from cropland.”

As contaminan­t levels increase, communitie­s can experience other water quality concerns, too.

“We know that wetland drainage increases the amount of nutrients sent downstream. That has the potential to cause other water quality issues. Think of the algae blooms we see in Pigeon Lake, Lake Winnipeg, and Lake Diefenbake­r,” says Badiou. “It’s happening all across the Prairies.”

Linking the Science

By researchin­g watersheds, Badiou and his DUC team can better demonstrat­e what happens when people make changes to the Prairie’s natural systems, such as draining wetlands. It’s important informatio­n that all farmers in Alberta need to think about.

 ?? Photo contribute­d ?? DUC researcher Pascal Badiou and his team take a reading at a measuremen­t station for the Camrose Creek Watershed research project.
Photo contribute­d DUC researcher Pascal Badiou and his team take a reading at a measuremen­t station for the Camrose Creek Watershed research project.

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