Preliminary Investigations Into the Impact On Metal and Cationic Surface and Groundwater Fluxes Due to the Mountain Pine Beetle Epidemic: Summit County, Colorado

Monday, April 12, 2010
Continental Foyer (Westin Tabor Center, Denver)
Kristin M. Mikkelson , Environmental Science and Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO
John McCray , Environmental Science and Engineering, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO
The mountain pine beetle (MPB) epidemic in Western North America has generated growing concern in recent years.  Increasing numbers of outbreaks have affected an estimated two million acres of forest in Colorado and Wyoming alone during 2008.  Given the substantial acreage of prematurely dying forests within the Colorado mineralized belt, it has been hypothesized that the effects of the MPB outbreak will be similar to those observed after forest harvesting.  We hypothesize that physical phenomena typically experienced after deforestation, such as increased erosion and runoff, will affect the transport of metals through the groundwater/surface water interface.  Summit County, Colorado provides an excellent field site for researching the MPB impacts as specific reaches of Pennsylvania Creek have been affected by MPB while others have remained untouched.  Field data from Pennsylvania Creek and surrounding areas are being collected and analyzed to determine the physical relationships between the groundwater and surface water and to lay the groundwork for long-term observation of metal fluxes.    Currently, measurements are taken on a timescale to understand the daily and seasonal fluxes of water between the groundwater and surface water at multiple locations along a two mile reach of Pennsylvania Creek and Cucumber Creek.    Surface water samples are analyzed for metal and cationic constituents using ICP-AES at locations corresponding to high MPB impact and no observed MPB impact.  

The implications of these results for the transfer of metals and cations through the groundwater/surface water interface are presented along with a comparison of USGS water quality data pre and post-MPB.