scholarly journals Are natural floods accelerators for streambank vegetation development in floodplain restoration?

Author(s):  
Barbara Stammel ◽  
Julia Stäps ◽  
André Schwab ◽  
Kathrin Kiehl
2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 136-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. G. Booth ◽  
S. P. Loheide ◽  
R. D. Hansis

Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 481
Author(s):  
Sarah A. Morley ◽  
Linda D. Rhodes ◽  
Anne E. Baxter ◽  
Giles W. Goetz ◽  
Abigail H. Wells ◽  
...  

All cities face complex challenges managing urban stormwater while also protecting urban water bodies. Green stormwater infrastructure and process-based restoration offer alternative strategies that prioritize watershed connectivity. We report on a new urban floodplain restoration technique being tested in the City of Seattle, USA: an engineered hyporheic zone. The hyporheic zone has long been an overlooked component in floodplain restoration. Yet this subsurface area offers enormous potential for stormwater amelioration and is a critical component of healthy streams. From 2014 to 2017, we measured hyporheic temperature, nutrients, and microbial and invertebrate communities at three paired stream reaches with and without hyporheic restoration. At two of the three pairs, water temperature was significantly lower at the restored reach, while dissolved organic carbon and microbial metabolism were higher. Hyporheic invertebrate density and taxa richness were significantly higher across all three restored reaches. These are some of the first quantified responses of hyporheic biological communities to restoration. Our results complement earlier reports of enhanced hydrologic and chemical functioning of the engineered hyporheic zone. Together, this research demonstrates that incorporation of hyporheic design elements in floodplain restoration can enhance temperature moderation, habitat diversity, contaminant filtration, and the biological health of urban streams.


1995 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 485-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Valladares ◽  
Leopoldo G. Sancho

AbstractThe stages of vegetation development close to two glacier fronts on two of the South Shetland Islands (Livingston and Robert) within the Maritime Antarctic were studied with special reference to saxicolous lichens. A lichenometric study of the crustose lichen Caloplaca sublobulata was carried out at both sites. On the moraine of Livingston Island, rock size played an important role in lichen development, explaining most of the differences observed in the diameter of C. sublobulata, the number of species, and the percentage of cover among the rocks studied. On Robert Island, the distance from the glacier front was associated with the lichen cover of the rocks but not with diameter of C. sublobulata This homogeneous distribution of C. sublobulata thallus size on the Robert Island study area points to a simultaneous recolonization of the whole zone by this lichen. The lichen development in the area studied on Robert Island seems to have been drastically affected by fluctuations in the persistence of snow cover following glacier front retreat. Tentative associations between ice retreat and colonization, on the o e hand, and changes in snow cover duration and the dynamic processes of extinction and recolonization, on the other, are suggested from comparison of the two zones.


2010 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 27-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Regina de Aquino-Silva ◽  
Marcos Roberto Simão ◽  
Denise da Silva Santos ◽  
Eduardo Jorge de Brito Bastos

The aim of restoration is recompose a new vegetation structure in order to obtain benefits such as the containment of bank erosion, reestablishment of a hydric and nutrient regime, and increase the diversity of species. The present paper evaluated the development of the vegetation introduced as ciliar forest around a mining lagoon through establishing indicators based on the vegetation structure, physic-chemical characteristics of the soil and the water. Results show that the indicators of vegetation, like dying of species and the covering of top were classified as negative factors. Regarding vegetation development, it was considered positive when individuals out of inundation points were analyzed. According to soil indicators, chemical factor pH acid suggests intoxication by aluminum, iron and manganese impeding development of the vegetation in the local. Topographic factor also caused erosion and dying/extinction of species localized in declining points and carried nutrients to the inundation point and finally to the sand mining pool.


2006 ◽  
Vol 132 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Nigel R. Critchley ◽  
John A. Fowbert ◽  
Ann J. Sherwood ◽  
Richard F. Pywell

2016 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierluigi Pieruccini ◽  
Claudio Di Celma ◽  
Federico Di Rita ◽  
Donatella Magri ◽  
Giorgio Carnevale ◽  
...  

AbstractA 25 m-thick outcrop section exposed at Torre Mucchia, on the sea-cliff north of Ortona, eastern central Italy, comprises a rare Middle Pleistocene succession of shallow-water and paralic sediments along the western Adriatic Sea. An integrated study of the section, including facies and microfacies analyses, and characterization of paleobiological associations (mollusks, fishes, ostracods, foraminifers and pollen), enable a detailed reconstruction of the paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic conditions during deposition. The shallow-water deposits include a transgressive, deepening- and fining-upward shoreface to offshore-transition facies succession overlain by a regressive shoreface-foreshore sandstone body with an erosive base and a rooted and pedogenically altered horizon at the top that imply deposition during sea-level fall. This forced regressive unit is overlain by paralic strata forming a transgressive succession comprising palustrine carbonates and back-barrier lagoonal mudstones. The palustrine carbonates exhibit some of the typical features encountered in palustrine limestones deposited within seasonal freshwater wetlands (marl prairies). Following the sea-level rising trend, the freshwater marshes were abruptly replaced by a barrier-lagoon system that allowed deposition of the overlying mud-rich unit. Within these deposits, the faunal assemblages are consistent with a low-energy brackish environment characterized by a relatively high degree of confinement. The pollen record documents the development of open forest vegetation dominated by Pinus and accompanied by a number of mesophilous and thermophilous tree taxa, whose composition supports a tentative correlation with Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage 17. The new pollen record from Torre Mucchia improves our understanding of the vegetation development in the Italian Peninsula during the Middle Pleistocene and sheds new light on the role played by the most marked glacial periods in determining the history of tree taxa.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document