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Working with wood in rivers in the Western United States

Working with wood in rivers in the Western United States
Working with wood in rivers in the Western United States
Recognition of the important physical and ecological roles played by large wood in channels and on floodplains has grown substantially during recent decades. Although large wood continues to be routinely removed from many river corridors worldwide,the practice of wood reintroduction has spread across the United States, the United Kingdom and western Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. The state-of-science regarding working with wood in rivers was discussed during a workshop held in Colorado, USA, in September 2022 with 40 participants who are scientists and practitioners from across the USA, UK, Europe, and Japan. The objectives of this paper are to present the findings from the workshop; summarize two case studies of wood in river restoration in the western United States; and provide suggestions for advancing the practice of wood in river management. We summarize the workshop results based on participant judgements and recommendations with respect to:(i) limitations and key barriers to using wood, which reflect perceptions and practicalities; (ii) gaps in the use of large wood in river management; (iii) scenarios in which wood is generally used effectively; and (iv) scenarios in which wood is generally not used effectively. The case studies illustrate the importance of the local geomorphic context, the configuration complexity of the wood, and the potential for modification of river corridor morphology to enhance desired benefits. Moving forward, we stress the importance of collaboration across disciplines and across communities of research scientists, practitioners, regulators, and potential stakeholders; accounting for stake-holder perceptions of the use of large wood; and increasing non-scientist access to the latest state-of-science knowledge
engineered logjams, large wood, natural flood management, nature-based solutions, practitioners, stage zero restoration
1535-1459
1626-1641
Ockelford, Annie
e37f4ae6-dee0-4644-a313-019411cbb174
Wohl, Ellen
12ac1404-4c97-4cc5-ab7e-5e5022b00968
Ruiz-Villanueva, Virginia
b8d311e4-97e9-4652-83ff-f66914c07238
Darby, Stephen
4c3e1c76-d404-4ff3-86f8-84e42fbb7970
et al.
Ockelford, Annie
e37f4ae6-dee0-4644-a313-019411cbb174
Wohl, Ellen
12ac1404-4c97-4cc5-ab7e-5e5022b00968
Ruiz-Villanueva, Virginia
b8d311e4-97e9-4652-83ff-f66914c07238
Darby, Stephen
4c3e1c76-d404-4ff3-86f8-84e42fbb7970

Ockelford, Annie, Wohl, Ellen and Ruiz-Villanueva, Virginia , et al. (2024) Working with wood in rivers in the Western United States. River Research and Applications, 40 (8), 1626-1641. (doi:10.1002/rra.4331).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recognition of the important physical and ecological roles played by large wood in channels and on floodplains has grown substantially during recent decades. Although large wood continues to be routinely removed from many river corridors worldwide,the practice of wood reintroduction has spread across the United States, the United Kingdom and western Europe, Australia, and New Zealand. The state-of-science regarding working with wood in rivers was discussed during a workshop held in Colorado, USA, in September 2022 with 40 participants who are scientists and practitioners from across the USA, UK, Europe, and Japan. The objectives of this paper are to present the findings from the workshop; summarize two case studies of wood in river restoration in the western United States; and provide suggestions for advancing the practice of wood in river management. We summarize the workshop results based on participant judgements and recommendations with respect to:(i) limitations and key barriers to using wood, which reflect perceptions and practicalities; (ii) gaps in the use of large wood in river management; (iii) scenarios in which wood is generally used effectively; and (iv) scenarios in which wood is generally not used effectively. The case studies illustrate the importance of the local geomorphic context, the configuration complexity of the wood, and the potential for modification of river corridor morphology to enhance desired benefits. Moving forward, we stress the importance of collaboration across disciplines and across communities of research scientists, practitioners, regulators, and potential stakeholders; accounting for stake-holder perceptions of the use of large wood; and increasing non-scientist access to the latest state-of-science knowledge

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 June 2024
Published date: October 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s). River Research and Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: engineered logjams, large wood, natural flood management, nature-based solutions, practitioners, stage zero restoration

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491588
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491588
ISSN: 1535-1459
PURE UUID: 866365c9-6255-42c4-a199-0993e3fcc4b7
ORCID for Stephen Darby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8778-4394

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Date deposited: 27 Jun 2024 16:43
Last modified: 20 Nov 2024 02:35

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Contributors

Author: Annie Ockelford
Author: Ellen Wohl
Author: Virginia Ruiz-Villanueva
Author: Stephen Darby ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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