Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.

Dams are known to impact river channels and ecosystems, both during their lifetime and in their decommissioning. In this study, we applied a before-after-control-impact design associated with two small dam removals to investigate abiotic and biotic recovery trajectories from both the elimination of...

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Main Authors: Desirée D Tullos, Debra S Finn, Cara Walter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169487?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-cedb930d12b4415093fee039c3e283192020-11-25T01:21:51ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10809110.1371/journal.pone.0108091Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.Desirée D TullosDebra S FinnCara WalterDams are known to impact river channels and ecosystems, both during their lifetime and in their decommissioning. In this study, we applied a before-after-control-impact design associated with two small dam removals to investigate abiotic and biotic recovery trajectories from both the elimination of the press disturbance associated with the presence of dams and the introduction of a pulse disturbance associated with removal of dams. The two case studies represent different geomorphic and ecological conditions that we expected to represent low and high sensitivities to the pulse disturbance of dam removal: the 4 m tall, gravel-filled Brownsville Dam on the wadeable Calapooia River and the 12.5 m tall, sand and gravel-filled Savage Rapids Dam on the largely non-wadeable Rogue River. We evaluated both geomorphic and ecological responses annually for two years post removal, and asked if functional traits of the macroinvertebrate assemblages provided more persistent signals of ecological disturbance than taxonomically defined assemblages over the period of study. Results indicate that: 1) the presence of the dams constituted a strong ecological press disturbance to the near-downstream reaches on both rivers, despite the fact that both rivers passed unregulated flow and sediment during the high flow season; 2) ecological recovery from this press disturbance occurred within the year following the restoration action of dam removal, whereas signals of geomorphic disturbance from the pulse of released sediment persisted two years post-removal, and 3) the strength of the press disturbance and the rapid ecological recovery were detected regardless of whether recovery was assessed by taxonomic or functional assemblages and for both case studies, in spite of their different geomorphic settings.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169487?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Desirée D Tullos
Debra S Finn
Cara Walter
spellingShingle Desirée D Tullos
Debra S Finn
Cara Walter
Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Desirée D Tullos
Debra S Finn
Cara Walter
author_sort Desirée D Tullos
title Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
title_short Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
title_full Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
title_fullStr Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
title_full_unstemmed Geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
title_sort geomorphic and ecological disturbance and recovery from two small dams and their removal.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Dams are known to impact river channels and ecosystems, both during their lifetime and in their decommissioning. In this study, we applied a before-after-control-impact design associated with two small dam removals to investigate abiotic and biotic recovery trajectories from both the elimination of the press disturbance associated with the presence of dams and the introduction of a pulse disturbance associated with removal of dams. The two case studies represent different geomorphic and ecological conditions that we expected to represent low and high sensitivities to the pulse disturbance of dam removal: the 4 m tall, gravel-filled Brownsville Dam on the wadeable Calapooia River and the 12.5 m tall, sand and gravel-filled Savage Rapids Dam on the largely non-wadeable Rogue River. We evaluated both geomorphic and ecological responses annually for two years post removal, and asked if functional traits of the macroinvertebrate assemblages provided more persistent signals of ecological disturbance than taxonomically defined assemblages over the period of study. Results indicate that: 1) the presence of the dams constituted a strong ecological press disturbance to the near-downstream reaches on both rivers, despite the fact that both rivers passed unregulated flow and sediment during the high flow season; 2) ecological recovery from this press disturbance occurred within the year following the restoration action of dam removal, whereas signals of geomorphic disturbance from the pulse of released sediment persisted two years post-removal, and 3) the strength of the press disturbance and the rapid ecological recovery were detected regardless of whether recovery was assessed by taxonomic or functional assemblages and for both case studies, in spite of their different geomorphic settings.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4169487?pdf=render
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