4.6 Article

Ecologically relevant geomorphic attributes of streams are impaired by even low levels of watershed effective imperviousness

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 206, Issue -, Pages 67-78

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2013.09.019

Keywords

Urbanization; Urban density; Stormwater drainage; Hydromodification

Funding

  1. project Cities as Water Supply Catchments
  2. Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities
  3. Melbourne Water through the Melbourne Waterway Protection and Restoration Science-Practice Partnership
  4. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT100100144]

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Urbanization almost inevitably results in changes to stream morphology. Understanding the mechanisms for such impacts is a prerequisite to minimizing stream degradation and achieving restoration goals. However, investigations of urban-induced changes to stream morphology typically use indicators of watershed urbanization that may not adequately represent degrading mechanisms and commonly focus on geomorphic attributes such as channel dimensions that may be of little significance to the ecological goals for restoration. We address these shortcomings by testing if a measure characterizing urban stormwater drainage system connections to streams (effective imperviousness, El) is a better predictor of change to ecologically relevant geomorphic attributes than a more general measure of urban density (total imperviousness, TI). We test this for 17 sites in independent watersheds across a gradient of urbanization. We found that El was a better predictor of all geomorphic variables tested than was TI. Bank instability was positively correlated with El, while width/depth (a measure of channel incision), bedload sediment depth, and frequency of bars, benches, and large wood were negatively correlated. Large changes in all geomorphic variables were detected at very low levels of El (<2-3%). Excess urban stormwater runoff, as represented by El, drives geomorphic change in urban streams, highlighting the dominant role of the stormwater drainage system in efficiently transferring stormwater runoff from impervious surfaces to the stream, as found for ecological indicators. It is likely that geomorphic condition of streams in urbanizing watersheds, particularly those attributes of ecological relevance, can only be maintained if excess urban stormwater flows are kept out of streams through retention and harvesting. The extent to which El can be reduced within urban and urbanizing watersheds, through techniques such as distributed stormwater harvesting and infiltration, and the components of the hydrologic regime to be addressed, requires further investigation. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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