4.3 Article

Geomorphic and Ecological Consequences of Riprap Placement in River Systems

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 1043-1059

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jawr.12279

Keywords

rivers; streams; sediment transport; fluvial processes; riparian zone; aquatic habitat; rock armor; riprap

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Riprap, consisting of large boulders or concrete blocks, is extensively used to stabilize streambanks and to inhibit lateral erosion of rivers, yet its effect on river morphology and its ecological consequences have been relatively little studied. In this paper, we review the available information, most of it culled from the grey literature. We use a simple one-dimensional morphodynamic model as a conceptual tool to illustrate potential morphological effects of riprap placement in a gravel-bed river, which include inhibition of local sediment supply to the channel and consequent channel bed scour and substrate coarsening, and downstream erosion. Riprap placement also tends to sever organic material input from the riparian zone, with loss of shade, wood input, and input of finer organic material. Available information on the consequences for the aquatic ecosystem mainly concerns effects on commercially and recreationally important fishes. The preponderance of studies report unfavorable effects on local numbers, but habitat niches created by openings in riprap can favorably affect invertebrates and some small fishes. There is a need for much more research on both morphological and ecosystem effects of riprap placement.

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