Incorporating hydromorphology in strategic approaches to managing flows for salmonids
Incorporating hydromorphology in strategic approaches to managing flows for salmonids
Whilst flow is often seen simplistically as a measurable and manageable variable in rivers, the habitat
value of flow is delivered by interactions with channel morphology and substrate. The resulting hydromorphology
impacts on all salmonid life stages; its proper understanding requires integration between the sciences of
hydrology/hydraulics, geomorphology and freshwater ecology, but this integration is scarce. This study describes
those features of river channel morphology and dynamics that are most relevant to hydromorphological status,
describes progress in field assessment and outlines practical progress in calibrating in-channel habitat condition as
an aid to setting flows. However, the incorporation of the true spatial and temporal variability of hydromorphology
awaits further refinement of survey techniques and the long-awaited interdisciplinary research on causal
process links. Meanwhile, amongst the geomorphological tools available to those setting environmental flows are
fluvial audits, the definition and mapping of meso-scale biotopes and the use of realistic river typologies for the
local application of general flow rules.
1-12
Newson, Malcolm
5eef297c-d32a-4667-9a77-92d63004de00
Sear, David
ccd892ab-a93d-4073-a11c-b8bca42ecfd3
Soulsby, Chris
0226753a-2b52-45f3-8a40-1cacc2b77eed
Newson, Malcolm
5eef297c-d32a-4667-9a77-92d63004de00
Sear, David
ccd892ab-a93d-4073-a11c-b8bca42ecfd3
Soulsby, Chris
0226753a-2b52-45f3-8a40-1cacc2b77eed
Newson, Malcolm, Sear, David and Soulsby, Chris
(2012)
Incorporating hydromorphology in strategic approaches to managing flows for salmonids.
Fisheries Management and Ecology, .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-2400.2011.00822.x).
(In Press)
Abstract
Whilst flow is often seen simplistically as a measurable and manageable variable in rivers, the habitat
value of flow is delivered by interactions with channel morphology and substrate. The resulting hydromorphology
impacts on all salmonid life stages; its proper understanding requires integration between the sciences of
hydrology/hydraulics, geomorphology and freshwater ecology, but this integration is scarce. This study describes
those features of river channel morphology and dynamics that are most relevant to hydromorphological status,
describes progress in field assessment and outlines practical progress in calibrating in-channel habitat condition as
an aid to setting flows. However, the incorporation of the true spatial and temporal variability of hydromorphology
awaits further refinement of survey techniques and the long-awaited interdisciplinary research on causal
process links. Meanwhile, amongst the geomorphological tools available to those setting environmental flows are
fluvial audits, the definition and mapping of meso-scale biotopes and the use of realistic river typologies for the
local application of general flow rules.
Text
Newson_Sear_Soulsby_2012.pdf
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Accepted/In Press date: June 2012
Organisations:
Earth Surface Dynamics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 342943
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/342943
ISSN: 0969-997X
PURE UUID: 5157a144-9e9b-49a3-a9cb-60e783beb3f7
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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2012 10:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:47
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Author:
Malcolm Newson
Author:
Chris Soulsby
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