3.8 Article

Geomorphology, ecology and river channel habitat: mesoscale approaches to basin-scale challenges

期刊

PROGRESS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
卷 24, 期 2, 页码 195-217

出版社

ARNOLD, HODDER HEADLINE PLC
DOI: 10.1177/030913330002400203

关键词

biotope; channel; diversity; ecosystem; flow; geomorphology; habitat; hydraulics; mesoscale; patch dynamics; river continuum concept; surveys

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The physical component of river channel (instream) habitat is of acknowledged significance, particularly in headwater streams; furthermore, physical habitats have been heavily impacted by human needs for river services: principally flood defence (channel modification) and water resources (flow regulation). Despite the control exercised on physical habitats by fluvial geomorphology (channel shape, bed material size, bedforms and bars) and flow regime (including the varying hydraulics of now around these forms), their interaction has hitherto lacked a distinctive spatial formulation and biological validation. This article describes the challenges faced by a need (in both theoretical and practical areas) to understand the detail of physical habitat conditions in stream channels. A number of mesoscale approaches are emerging, both from ecology and geomorphology. We outline the field validation of a 'habitat hydraulics' approach to the interaction between river discharge and channel form. Qualitative 'flow types' are shown to be representative of discrete hydraulic conditions within mesoscale units of the channel bed described as 'physical biotopes'. The approach is compared with parallel ecological research on 'mesohabitats' and 'functional habitats'. The extent, pattern and discharge-variability of physical biotopes can be surveyed in the field and used as a spatial guide to biological sampling (in this case for benthic invertebrates). Biological patterns (at the scale sampled here) appear to respond first to the river continuum concept's longitudinal zonation of the channel, but there is a marked secondary signal in statistical analyses from the pattern of biotopes. Given the promise of the physical biotope approach, its logical extension in predictive mode is via the hierarchical concepts shared by freshwater ecologists and geomorphologists; however, there is little agreement on scale terminology hierarchical principles and, above all, a truly geomorphological channel classification, based on reaches, into which mesoscale habitat typologies could be fed. Assuming a relationship between biological diversity and that of physical biotopes it should be the aim of river managers, whether intervening in the channel form or its flow regime, to optimize certain parameters of the pattern of biotopes; these parameters should be focus for future research. Both the rapid survey and proper description of these patterns will benefit from the application of remote-sensing technology, improved instruments for microscale hydraulic studies and a GIS approach based upon the spatial principles of landscape ecology.

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