Due the voluminous number of all research articles, please wait for a moment.

Drivers of variability in large wood loads along the fluvial continuum of a Mediterranean intermittent river

date_range 2020
person
Author Galia T.
description
Abstract Although in-channel and floodplain large wood (LW) has been recognized as an important component of lotic ecosystems, there is still limited knowledge on the recruitment, mobility and retention of LW in rivers with an intermittent hydrological regime. In this study, we analysed the LW characteristics and related reach-scale variables of 22 reaches in a Mediterranean intermittent river (Evrotas, Greece) in order to identify predictors of in-channel and floodplain LW distribution. Our results indicated high downstream variation in LW volumes in the fluvial corridor (0.05–25.51 m3/ha for in-channel LW and 0–30.88 m3/ha for floodplain LW). In-channel and floodplain LW retention was primarily driven by the hydrological regime of the studied reaches (i.e. perennial or non-perennial) with higher volumes of LW observed in perennial sections. The width of the riparian corridor was an important predictor of LW storage at the reach scale. Non-perennial reaches had a disproportionally larger number of relatively small-diameter living trees at the expense of mature trees with larger diameters typical for riparian stands functioning as LW recruitment areas in perennial reaches. The smaller dimensions of in-channel LW in non-perennial reaches, coupled with the dominance of loose LW pieces, implies frequent LW transport during ordinary flood events. Nevertheless, overall low LW retention in the fluvial corridor under non-perennial flow regime predicts low volumes of mobilized LW. In contrast, the recruitment of relatively long and large-diameter LW from mature riparian stands in perennial reaches, together with additional LW stabilization by banks, bed sediments, living trees or other LW pieces decreases the potential for further LW transport. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
article
DOI 10.1002/esp.4865
language
Journal Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
description
Source Scopus

Submit your feedback

CARI! has performed crawling, tagging, and other data processing to produce this page. If you find an error or have feedback for this page, please fill out the form below. Thank You.
How to correct
  • Name and Email are required!
  • One of the location fields (prov, district, or sub-district) must be filled in
  • Fields other than those mentioned above are optional

Meta Tags

Source from CARI Engine
Provincies :
Cities :
Districts :
Hazards : Flood
Sub DM Phase : Vulnerability Assesment
Sub Aspects :

Citations Articles

Source from Semantic Scholar
The impact of catastrophic forest blowdown on large wood loads in headwater streams
Plants and river morphodynamics: The emergence of fluvial biogeomorphology
Floodplain and in-channel large wood storage in the fluvial corridor of an actively meandering river
A high‐resolution inter‐annual framework for exploring hydrological drivers of large wood dynamics
Integrating Ensemble Weather Predictions in a Hydrologic-Hydraulic Modelling System for Fine-Resolution Flood Forecasting: The Case of Skala Bridge at Evrotas River, Greece
Spatiotemporal variations of large wood and river channel morphology in a rapidly degraded reach of an intermittent river
Modeling the relative morphodynamic influence of vegetation and large wood in a dryland ephemeral stream, Arizona, USA
The Evaluation of Color Spaces for Large Woody Debris Detection in Rivers Using XGBoost Algorithm
Disturbance and valley confinement: Controls on floodplain large wood and organic matter jam deposition in the Colorado Front Range, USA
Evaluating soil quality status of fluvisols at the regional scale: A multidisciplinary approach crossing multiple variables
Managing nonperennial headwater streams in temperate forests of the United States
Floodplain Large Wood and Organic Matter Jam Formation After a Large Flood: Investigating the Influence of Floodplain Forest Stand Characteristics and River Corridor Morphology
Introduction to the Wood in World Rivers special issue
Classifying Streamflow Duration: The Scientific Basis and an Operational Framework for Method Development

References Articles

Source from Semantic Scholar