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Abstract The Midwest of the USA is a highly productive agricultural region, in part due to the installation of perforated subsurface pipes, known as tile drains that remove excess water from wet soils. Tile drains rapidly move water to nearby streams, influencing how quickly streamflow rises and falls (i.e., streamflow “flashiness”). Currently, there are no comprehensive studies that compare the extent to which tile drainage influences flashiness across large and diverse agricultural regions. We address this knowledge gap by examining growing‐season (April–October) flashiness using the Richards‐Baker Index (RBI) in 139 watersheds located throughout the Midwest. Using a spatial tile‐drainage dataset, watersheds were split into low, medium, and high tile‐drainage classes. We found no significant differences between the flashiness of these three classes using a one‐way Kruskal–Wallis test. When watersheds were separated into infiltration groups to help control for different soil types, the high tile‐drainage class RBI was significantly higher than the low tile‐drainage class RBI in the high infiltration group. To further understand the causes of flashiness, additional environmental variables and their relationship to flashiness were examined using multivariate regression. In the low infiltration group, tile drainage significantly reduced flashiness, with watershed area and average depth to water table being the largest influences on flashiness. Tile drainage produced a larger reduction in flashiness in the high infiltration watersheds, with the largest influences being percent clay in the watershed and watershed area. These results indicate that the influence of tile drainage on flashiness emerges only after other watershed variables are accounted for. Given that tile drainage may increase in the future as precipitation patterns and extremes change, flashiness will likely continue to be modified. These results lead to an improved understanding of flood‐generating and nutrient transport mechanisms that are relevant to stakeholders across a wide range of sectors.more » « less
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Abstract The 2021 emergence of the 17‐year Brood X cicadas (Magicicada septendecim,M. cassinii, andM. septendecula) saw billions of cicadas emerge from the soil throughout the midwestern and eastern United States. The emergence left connected burrows visible at the surface, which are hypothesized to affect near surface hydrologic processes. To investigate these processes, we used single‐ring, dual head infiltrometers to measure field saturated hydraulic conductivity (Kfs,n = 70) across patterns of emergence and land use in south‐central Indiana, USA. Our experimental design included locations with and without cicada burrows in forested (undisturbed) and urbanized (disturbed) areas. Across undisturbed sites, we found a significant 80.8% increase inKfsbetween soils with (median = 14.1 cm/h;n = 20) and without (median = 7.8 cm/h;n = 20) cicada burrows. At disturbed sites, we found no significant difference inKfsbetween sites with (median = 4.2 cm/h;n = 18) and without (median = 4.4 cm/h;n = 12) cicada burrows. We found a significant correlation between the number of burrows present at the surface andKfsrates for undisturbed sites ( = 0.42;p = 0.008), while no correlation was found for the disturbed sites ( = −0.09;p = 0.62). Our measurements suggest that the effect of burrows onKfsis minimized in urbanized areas, potentially due to compaction and other impacts from human disturbance that mitigate the presence of macropores left by cicadas. In contrast, surface‐connected macroporosity from Brood X cicada burrows in undisturbed areas act as a conduit for precipitation into the soil profile and bypass flow into deeper horizons and the shallow groundwater table, with implications for runoff dynamics, soil and groundwater recharge and quality, and nutrient cycling.more » « less
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