Islands in the stream: spatial and temporal patterns of logjam-induced river corridor dynamics
Date
2024
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Abstract
Spatial and temporal variations in water and sediment fluxes moving within the river corridor drive changes in the three-dimensional geometry of channels and floodplains. In forested river corridors, pieces of large wood (> 10 cm diameter and 1 m length) and logjams (≥ 3 pieces of large wood) become an integral part of the interactions among water, sediment, and the resulting river corridor form and function. The net effect of logjams stored at least temporarily in the river corridor is to increase spatial heterogeneity, or patchiness, via processes such as channel avulsion and formation/abandonment of secondary channels, increased channel-floodplain connectivity, and greater instream aggradation. The importance of spatial heterogeneity, logjams, and secondary channels/islands to river corridor function has been well documented, but a lack of existing quantitative underpinning creates knowledge gaps in the processes driving island formation and persistence, the role of wood in facilitating these processes, and the complex interactions between flow, sediment, and wood in dynamic river corridors. This dissertation addresses some of the existing knowledge gaps around how logjams interact in a river corridor to create heterogeneity at different spatial and temporal scales by characterizing the patterns, processes, and interactions occurring in a naturally dynamic system. The topics explored here focus on research primarily conducted along the Swan River in the Northern Rocky Mountains of Montana with mention of sites in the Southern Rocky Mountains of Colorado. These locations represent some of the few remaining river corridors in the contiguous U.S. with natural flow, sediment, and wood regimes, but represent former widespread conditions. In the work that follows, Chapter 2 explores the processes driving spatial patterns in bifurcations induced by logjams. I find that logjam-induced bifurcations exist as a continuum of different patterns and the position of a river segment along this continuum correlates with the ratio of erosive force to erosional resistance. Chapter 3 builds on this by investigating how accretionary and avulsive processes shape bifurcations over time, emphasizing a temporal progression of logjam-induced features using 14C and tree ring data. I find that islands tend to grow through upstream migration – the presence of buried logs with contemporary trees growing on them indicates this process – and lateral accretion. Chapter 4 dives deeper into the interactions between process and form, demonstrating the relationship between channel dynamism, logjam presence, and spatial heterogeneity at larger temporal and spatial scales. I find that logjams and channel movement through time interact in a cascade of processes and feedbacks that foster increased spatial heterogeneity. Wood preferentially accumulates in more geomorphically heterogeneous portions of the river corridor that provide sites capable of trapping and retaining wood. Logjams can then drive greater total sinuosity and the formation of secondary channels that result in further wood trapping, greater heterogeneity of floodplain vegetation, and ideal habitat for beaver that further modify river corridor heterogeneity. I also find that bifurcations and spatial heterogeneity persist even after logjam is no longer present. These results have implications for river management. If sections of the river corridor with more logjams and more beaver meadows display higher spatial heterogeneity, creating and protecting wood-rich heterogeneous retention zones within a river corridor is an important component to emphasize for river resilience. If physical effects persist even after a logjam is no longer present, than wood reintroduced to the river corridor as individual pieces or engineered logjams does not have to be anchored in place to facilitate formation of geomorphic heterogeneity within the river corridor. By dissecting the complexities of processes governing naturally dynamic river corridors, this work adds quantitative insight to the diverse functionality of heterogenous river systems in forested or historically forested regions and provides a launching point for future river management aimed at fostering river corridor function and resilience.
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Subject
large wood
river
spatial heterogeneity
logjams
fluvial geomorphology
river corridor dynamics