Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams

Water development accompanying mankind development has turned rivers into endangered ecosystems. Improving the understanding of ecological responses to river management actions is a key issue for assuring sustainable water management. However, few studies have...

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Main Authors: Dolores Bejarano M., Sordo-Ward Á.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2011-10-01
Series:Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011059
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spelling doaj-139e6c510f3c4d7f95519767605bfc8b2020-11-24T22:31:20ZengEDP SciencesKnowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems1961-95022011-10-0104022010.1051/kmae/2011059kmae110020Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streamsDolores Bejarano M.0Sordo-Ward Á.1Hydrobiology Research Group, Forestry Engineering Department, Technical University of MadridDepartment of Civil Engineering: Hydraulic and Energy, Technical University of Madrid Water development accompanying mankind development has turned rivers into endangered ecosystems. Improving the understanding of ecological responses to river management actions is a key issue for assuring sustainable water management. However, few studies have been published where ecological metrics have been quantified in response to various degrees of flow alteration. In this work, changes in natural distribution of trees and shrubs within the riparian corridor (as indicator of the ecological status of the fluvial ecosystem) were quantified at multiple sites along a flow alteration gradient (as indicator of impact) along two regulated river reaches, one Boreal and the other Mediterranean, each downstream of a dam. Based on the obtained relationships we evaluated differences in response trends related to local physico-climatic factors of the two biomes and regarding to differing life-forms. Woody vegetation establishment patterns represented objective indicators of ecological responses to flow alteration. We found different responses between life-forms. Both trees and shrubs migrated downwards to the channel after dam closure, but shrubs were most impacted under higher degrees of flow alteration in terms of lateral movement. In addition, our results show clear longitudinal recovery trends of natural patterns of tree and shrub distribution corresponding to a decrease in intensity of hydrologic alteration in the Boreal river. However, vegetation encroachment persisted along the entire Mediterranean study reach. This may result from a relatively low gradient of decrease of hydrologic alteration with distance from the dam, coupled with other overlapping pressures and the mediating effect of physico-climatic characteristics on vegetation responses. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011059life-formMediterraneanBorealflow alterationvegetation encroachment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dolores Bejarano M.
Sordo-Ward Á.
spellingShingle Dolores Bejarano M.
Sordo-Ward Á.
Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
life-form
Mediterranean
Boreal
flow alteration
vegetation encroachment
author_facet Dolores Bejarano M.
Sordo-Ward Á.
author_sort Dolores Bejarano M.
title Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
title_short Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
title_full Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
title_fullStr Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
title_full_unstemmed Riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of Mediterranean and Boreal streams
title_sort riparian woodland encroachment following flow regulation: a comparative study of mediterranean and boreal streams
publisher EDP Sciences
series Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
issn 1961-9502
publishDate 2011-10-01
description Water development accompanying mankind development has turned rivers into endangered ecosystems. Improving the understanding of ecological responses to river management actions is a key issue for assuring sustainable water management. However, few studies have been published where ecological metrics have been quantified in response to various degrees of flow alteration. In this work, changes in natural distribution of trees and shrubs within the riparian corridor (as indicator of the ecological status of the fluvial ecosystem) were quantified at multiple sites along a flow alteration gradient (as indicator of impact) along two regulated river reaches, one Boreal and the other Mediterranean, each downstream of a dam. Based on the obtained relationships we evaluated differences in response trends related to local physico-climatic factors of the two biomes and regarding to differing life-forms. Woody vegetation establishment patterns represented objective indicators of ecological responses to flow alteration. We found different responses between life-forms. Both trees and shrubs migrated downwards to the channel after dam closure, but shrubs were most impacted under higher degrees of flow alteration in terms of lateral movement. In addition, our results show clear longitudinal recovery trends of natural patterns of tree and shrub distribution corresponding to a decrease in intensity of hydrologic alteration in the Boreal river. However, vegetation encroachment persisted along the entire Mediterranean study reach. This may result from a relatively low gradient of decrease of hydrologic alteration with distance from the dam, coupled with other overlapping pressures and the mediating effect of physico-climatic characteristics on vegetation responses.
topic life-form
Mediterranean
Boreal
flow alteration
vegetation encroachment
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2011059
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