GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017

Paper No. 360-7
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:30 PM

EXAMINING HOW STREAM SIZE INFLUENCES THE RELATIVE GEOMORPHIC CHANGE TRIGGERED BY LARGE WOOD INTRODUCTIONS


YEAGER, Amelia and SEGURA, Catalina, Department of Forest Engineering, Resources, and Management, Oregon State University, 210 Snell Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331, yeageame@oregonstate.edu

Large wood (LW) jams have long been utilized as a stream restoration strategy to create fish habitat, with a strong focus on Coho salmon in the Pacific Northwest. These projects continue to be implemented despite limited understanding of their success in streams of different size. In this study, we assessed the changes triggered by LW introductions in 10 alluvial plane bed reaches with varying drainage areas (3.9-22 km2) and bankfull widths (6.4-14.7 m) in one Oregon Coast Range basin. In this basin, LW was added in an effort to improve winter rearing habitat for Coho salmon. We used detailed topographic mapping (0.5 m2 resolution) to describe the local stream and floodplain geometry. Pebble counts were used to monitor changes in average substrate size after the LW addition. Field surveys were conducted immediately after the LW were installed, in the summer of 2016, and one year after installation, in the summer of 2017. We used geomorphic change detection analysis to quantify the amount of scour and deposition at each site along with changes in average bankfull width. Then we determined the relative amount of change among all sites to identify which size stream changed the most. We also modeled fluctuations in water surface elevation at each site, correlating frequency and inundation of the LW with geomorphic changes detected from the topographic surveys. Preliminary results show an increase in channel width and floodplain connectivity at all sites, indicating an increase in off-channel habitat for juvenile Coho salmon. Bankfull widths increased up to 75% in small sites and up to 25% in large sites. Median grain size became coarser in large streams (increased up to 20%), while we saw a similar amount of fining at smaller sites. The overall increase in channel width is compensated by an overall decrease in bed elevation at both large and small sites, suggesting the maintenance of overall geomorphic equilibrium. Further work will include quantifying these geomorphic changes in the context of critical salmon habitat factors. By identifying which size stream changes the most after LW introduction, and linking this change to salmon habitat metrics, we will provide information to aid in optimizing future LW stream restoration efforts that focus on stream reaches likely to experience the greatest increase in fish habitat.