Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat

As public awareness of river degradation has grown in recent years, the number of stream restoration activities has increased dramatically. Anthropogenic influences at a range of spatial scales from watershed landuse to riparian vegetation management to local channel morphology can have hierarchical...

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Main Author: Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg
Other Authors: Biological Systems Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77172
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02092011-230350/
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-77172
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic aquatic habitat
boulders
mountain streams
2D hydraulic models
urbanization
stream temperature
riparian vegetation
spellingShingle aquatic habitat
boulders
mountain streams
2D hydraulic models
urbanization
stream temperature
riparian vegetation
Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg
Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
description As public awareness of river degradation has grown in recent years, the number of stream restoration activities has increased dramatically. Anthropogenic influences at a range of spatial scales from watershed landuse to riparian vegetation management to local channel morphology can have hierarchical relationships to local (meso- and macro-) in-stream habitat characteristics. This research examined these influences first by examining the influence of complex channel morphology on meso-scale brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) habitat in Shenandoah National Park, VA, and then by examining the combined influence of watershed urbanization and riparian vegetation (100-200 m reaches) on stream temperature. Moving beyond one-dimensional (1D) averaged representations of fish habitat, this research explored the distribution of two-dimensional (2D) flow complexity metrics at the meso-habitat scale as explanatory variables for brook trout habitat preferences and as potential metrics to evaluate habitat restoration design. Spatial hydraulic complexity metrics, including area-weighted circulation and kinetic energy gradients, were calculated based on 2D depth averaged modeled velocity distributions in two 100-m reaches on the Staunton River. While there were no statistically significant correlations between kinetic energy gradients or area-weighted circulation and fish density, fish density was positively correlated to the percent of the channel dominated by protruding boulders. The structural complexity of areas with protruding boulders create complex flow patterns suggesting that flow complexity plays an important role in available brook trout habitat preferences at the local scale, although the 2D depth averaged model may not have adequately represented this complexity. The 2D distribution of flow characteristics was then investigated further to quantify areas of flow refugia (low velocity shelters) and the relationship between these areas, traditional measures of habitat quality, and fish biomass. Flow complexity in the vicinity of flow obstructions (in this case, boulders) was investigated further using patch classification and landscape ecology metrics. The relative influence of riparian vegetation on stream temperature (another important habitat characteristic) in urban and nonurban watersheds was investigated in 27 paired forested and nonforested reaches in PA, MD, and DE. Riparian vegetation and watershed-scale urbanization both influence stream temperature, which can have profound impacts on in-stream ecosystems. Generally, increased urbanization and removal of riparian forest influenced maximum stream temperatures resulting in higher maximum summer stream temperatures (up to 1.8°C); however, the influence of riparian forests (at at 100-200 m reach scale) decreased with increasing urbanization. Extreme maximum summer temperatures, which are a concern for aquatic biota, increased in both frequency and duration in urban nonforested reaches relative to forested reaches indicating that the addition of a forested 100-200 m long buffer partially mitigated these temperature extremes even in urban watersheds. Overall, changes to channel morphology and riparian vegetation had measurable local effects on stream habitat (temperature and hydraulic complexity) yet the implications of restoration efforts at the local scale on ecosystem services at a larger (km +) scale requires further study. === Ph. D.
author2 Biological Systems Engineering
author_facet Biological Systems Engineering
Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg
author Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg
author_sort Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg
title Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
title_short Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
title_full Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
title_fullStr Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
title_full_unstemmed Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat
title_sort channel morphology and riparian vegetation influences on fluvial aquatic habitat
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77172
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02092011-230350/
work_keys_str_mv AT kozarekjessicalindberg channelmorphologyandriparianvegetationinfluencesonfluvialaquatichabitat
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-771722021-08-17T05:28:01Z Channel Morphology and Riparian Vegetation Influences on Fluvial Aquatic Habitat Kozarek, Jessica Lindberg Biological Systems Engineering Hession, W. Cully Thompson, Theresa M. Orth, Donald J. Dolloff, C. Andrew Diplas, Panayiotis aquatic habitat boulders mountain streams 2D hydraulic models urbanization stream temperature riparian vegetation As public awareness of river degradation has grown in recent years, the number of stream restoration activities has increased dramatically. Anthropogenic influences at a range of spatial scales from watershed landuse to riparian vegetation management to local channel morphology can have hierarchical relationships to local (meso- and macro-) in-stream habitat characteristics. This research examined these influences first by examining the influence of complex channel morphology on meso-scale brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) habitat in Shenandoah National Park, VA, and then by examining the combined influence of watershed urbanization and riparian vegetation (100-200 m reaches) on stream temperature. Moving beyond one-dimensional (1D) averaged representations of fish habitat, this research explored the distribution of two-dimensional (2D) flow complexity metrics at the meso-habitat scale as explanatory variables for brook trout habitat preferences and as potential metrics to evaluate habitat restoration design. Spatial hydraulic complexity metrics, including area-weighted circulation and kinetic energy gradients, were calculated based on 2D depth averaged modeled velocity distributions in two 100-m reaches on the Staunton River. While there were no statistically significant correlations between kinetic energy gradients or area-weighted circulation and fish density, fish density was positively correlated to the percent of the channel dominated by protruding boulders. The structural complexity of areas with protruding boulders create complex flow patterns suggesting that flow complexity plays an important role in available brook trout habitat preferences at the local scale, although the 2D depth averaged model may not have adequately represented this complexity. The 2D distribution of flow characteristics was then investigated further to quantify areas of flow refugia (low velocity shelters) and the relationship between these areas, traditional measures of habitat quality, and fish biomass. Flow complexity in the vicinity of flow obstructions (in this case, boulders) was investigated further using patch classification and landscape ecology metrics. The relative influence of riparian vegetation on stream temperature (another important habitat characteristic) in urban and nonurban watersheds was investigated in 27 paired forested and nonforested reaches in PA, MD, and DE. Riparian vegetation and watershed-scale urbanization both influence stream temperature, which can have profound impacts on in-stream ecosystems. Generally, increased urbanization and removal of riparian forest influenced maximum stream temperatures resulting in higher maximum summer stream temperatures (up to 1.8°C); however, the influence of riparian forests (at at 100-200 m reach scale) decreased with increasing urbanization. Extreme maximum summer temperatures, which are a concern for aquatic biota, increased in both frequency and duration in urban nonforested reaches relative to forested reaches indicating that the addition of a forested 100-200 m long buffer partially mitigated these temperature extremes even in urban watersheds. Overall, changes to channel morphology and riparian vegetation had measurable local effects on stream habitat (temperature and hydraulic complexity) yet the implications of restoration efforts at the local scale on ecosystem services at a larger (km +) scale requires further study. Ph. D. 2017-04-06T15:43:24Z 2017-04-06T15:43:24Z 2011-01-14 2011-02-09 2016-10-04 2011-02-23 Dissertation Text etd-02092011-230350 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77172 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02092011-230350/ en_US In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech