2015
DOI: 10.1002/rra.2968
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Hydrogeomorphic and Biotic Drivers of Instream Wood Differ Across Sub-basins of the Columbia River Basin, USA

Abstract: Instream wood promotes habitat heterogeneity through its influence on flow hydraulics and channel geomorphology. Within the Columbia River Basin, USA, wood is vital for the creation and maintenance of habitat for threatened salmonids. However, our understanding of the relative roles of the climatic, geomorphic, and ecological processes that source wood to streams is limited, making it difficult to identify baseline predictions of instream wood and create targets for stream restoration. Here, we investigate how… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Wood likely comes more dominantly from riparian mortality (related to forest stand characteristics and hydroclimatic/disturbance regimes) and bank erosion (Benda & Bigelow, 2014;Piégay et al, 2017). Our results indicating relationships between proxies for forest stand density (elevation at an intra-basin scale and climate or logging at an inter-basin scale) and wood load support the idea that land use and hydroclimatic regime determine forest characteristics and resulting wood supply (Hough-Snee et al, 2015).…”
Section: Wood Supplysupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…Wood likely comes more dominantly from riparian mortality (related to forest stand characteristics and hydroclimatic/disturbance regimes) and bank erosion (Benda & Bigelow, 2014;Piégay et al, 2017). Our results indicating relationships between proxies for forest stand density (elevation at an intra-basin scale and climate or logging at an inter-basin scale) and wood load support the idea that land use and hydroclimatic regime determine forest characteristics and resulting wood supply (Hough-Snee et al, 2015).…”
Section: Wood Supplysupporting
confidence: 69%
“…Previous broad-scale studies of wood load spatial variability (Hough-Snee et al, 2015; generally conclude that wood loads can be conceptualized at either broad (inter-basin) or local (intra-basin) scales by taking into account either bioclimatic or sitespecific variables (e.g., land use, channel geometry), respectively. However, a conceptual model to describe wood load spatial distribution that applies at all scales has yet to be developed.…”
Section: Objectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Previous broad-scale studies of wood load spatial variability (Hough-Snee et al, 2015; generally conclude that wood loads can be conceptualized at either broad (interbasin) or local (intrabasin) scales by taking into account either bioclimatic or site-specific variables (e.g., land use and channel geometry), respectively. However, a conceptual model to describe wood load spatial distribution that applies at all scales has yet to be developed.…”
Section: Objectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• Data Set S1 although this correlation has been observed to be direct in some cases and is strongly dependent on bioclimatic region and riparian forest characteristics (Burton et al, 2016;. Wood loads have little consistent relation to channel characteristics across bioclimatic regions, but individual regions and watersheds do display significant trends, allowing wood load to be predicted by variables describing geomorphic, ecologic, and anthropogenic conditions (Hough-Snee et al, 2015;. While mechanisms influencing wood transport and storage have been explored in flume environments (Bocchiola et al, 2006;Braudrick et al, 1997;Davidson et al, 2015), we still lack a good understanding of how well experimental results translate to natural conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%