4.6 Article

Engineered channel controls limiting spawning habitat rehabilitation success on regulated gravel-bed rivers

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 3-4, Pages 631-654

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2007.09.012

Keywords

river restoration; fluvial geomorphology; flow reregulation; two-dimensional modeling; salmonid habitat

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In efforts to rehabilitate regulated rivers for ecological benefits, the flow regime has been one of the primary focal points of management strategies. However, channel engineering can impact channel geometry such that hydraulic and geomorphic responses to flow reregulation do not yield the sought for benefits. To illustrate and assess the impacts of structural channel controls and flow reregulation on channel processes and fish habitat quality in multiple life stages, a highly detailed digital elevation model was collected and analyzed for a river reach right below a dam using a suite of hydrologic, hydraulic, geomorphic, and ecological methods. Results showed that, despite flow reregulation to produce a scaled-down natural hydrograph, anthropogenic boundary controls have severely altered geomorphic processes associated with geomorphic self-sustainability and instream habitat availability in the case study. Given the similarity of this stream to many others, we concluded that the potential utility of natural flow regime reinstatement in regulated gravel-bed rivers is conditional on concomitant channel rehabilitation. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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