A tool for tracking floodplain age land surface patterns on a large meandering river with applications for ecological planning and restoration design

An alluvial river channel typically meanders by eroding its outer banks and depositing sediments on the inside of bends, producing new land surfaces. Over time the landscape pattern created by these processes is important to the understanding of riparian plant ecology and the spatial structure of ri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Landscape and urban planning 2007-07, Vol.81 (4), p.354-373
Hauptverfasser: Greco, Steven E., Fremier, Alexander K., Larsen, Eric W., Plant, Richard E.
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container_issue 4
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container_title Landscape and urban planning
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creator Greco, Steven E.
Fremier, Alexander K.
Larsen, Eric W.
Plant, Richard E.
description An alluvial river channel typically meanders by eroding its outer banks and depositing sediments on the inside of bends, producing new land surfaces. Over time the landscape pattern created by these processes is important to the understanding of riparian plant ecology and the spatial structure of riparian forest development for restoration planning and design as well as other purposes. The middle sector of the Sacramento River is an actively meandering channel that deposits sediments in discrete new areas from fluvial geomorphic events creating a land age gradient. Newly formed land undergoes a primary succession by woody species such as willow and cottonwood communities that provide habitat for important conservation target species in California. Conservation and restoration of primary and secondary successional processes is an important management goal on the Sacramento River. The objectives of this paper were: (1) to develop and codify new methods to track the surficial chronological patterns of floodplain land age in a meandering river system, and (2) to analyze land production and the spatial distributions of gravel bars, riparian vegetation communities, and forest structure in relation to the land age gradient. Results from the ecological analysis indicate 71% of extant riparian vegetation was located within the 101-year meander zone; willow (18%) and cottonwood (31–43%) had the highest proportional canopy cover on lands aged 1–9 and 10–44 years, respectively. Potential applications of this approach for conservation and restoration planning and design of alluvial river floodplains are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2007.01.002
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subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Canopy structure
Ecological cascade effect
Floodplain age
Freshwater
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
GIS cartographic modeling
Meander migration
Primary succession
Sacramento River
title A tool for tracking floodplain age land surface patterns on a large meandering river with applications for ecological planning and restoration design
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