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Gravel-bed river floodplains are the ecological nexus of glaciated mountain landscapes

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1600026

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [NSF-IIA-1443108, DEB-1556248, DEB-1050459, DEB-1258203]
  2. Flathead Lake Biological Station professorship chair in limnology
  3. Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative (GNLCC) award [F11AC00388]
  4. Wilburforce Foundation
  5. U.S. Geological Survey Ecosystems
  6. GNLCC award [F11AC00388]
  7. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  8. Division Of Environmental Biology
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences [1050459] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  10. Office of Integrative Activities
  11. Office Of The Director [1443108] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Gravel-bed river floodplains in mountain landscapes disproportionately concentrate diverse habitats, nutrient cycling, productivity of biota, and species interactions. Although stream ecologists know that river channel and floodplain habitats used by aquatic organisms are maintained by hydrologic regimes that mobilize gravel-bed sediments, terrestrial ecologists have largely been unaware of the importance of floodplain structures and processes to the life requirements of a wide variety of species. We provide insight into gravel-bed rivers as the ecological nexus of glaciated mountain landscapes. We show why gravel-bed river floodplains are the primary arena where interactions take place among aquatic, avian, and terrestrial species from microbes to grizzly bears and provide essential connectivity as corridors for movement for both aquatic and terrestrial species. Paradoxically, gravel-bed river floodplains are also disproportionately unprotected where human developments are concentrated. Structural modifications to floodplains such as roads, railways, and housing and hydrologic-altering hydroelectric or water storage dams have severe impacts to floodplain habitat diversity and productivity, restrict local and regional connectivity, and reduce the resilience of both aquatic and terrestrial species, including adaptation to climate change. To be effective, conservation efforts in glaciated mountain landscapes intended to benefit the widest variety of organisms need a paradigm shift that has gravel-bed rivers and their floodplains as the central focus and that prioritizes the maintenance or restoration of the intact structure and processes of these critically important systems throughout their length and breadth.

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