Journal Article
Impacts of hydrologic and geomorphic alteration to the availability of shallow, low-velocity habitats in an intensively managed arid-land river
Date: 2024/06/17
Author(s): Mortensen J.G., Julien P.Y., Corsi B., Radobenko C., Anderson T.
Publication: River Res Applic. 2024;1–17
URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/rra.4338
DOI: 10.1002/rra.4338
Abstract:
This study seeks better understanding of linkages between channel morphology, streamflow, and aquatic habitat for the effective rehabilitation of imperiled species in rivers subjected to intensive water resource management. We focused on the variability of shallow, low-velocity (SLV) habitat over 50 years for a 56 km reach of the Rio Grande of central New Mexico (Middle Rio Grande). Hydraulic models used topo-graphic data obtained through long-term systematic monitoring between 1962 and2012 to derive relationships between discharge and SLV habitat availability. We developed a temporally integrated habitat metric (TIHM) to facilitate quantitative comparisons of SLV habitat availability over seasonal hydrologic periods (base flow, spring runoff, and summer low flow) for selected years representative of contemporary discharge variations. Results showed that SLV habitat availability, as captured by TIHM values, decreased on average by 83% over the study period (1962–2012), corresponding to completion of the Cochiti Dam (1973), which profoundly altered flow and sediment regimes. Resulting channel incision and floodplain disconnection, caused shifts in discharge-habitat relationships whereby increases in SLV habitat availability in the modern channel were strictly maximized at the upper range of modeled discharges (200 m3 s-1)—discharges greater than 100 m3 s-1 are infrequent today. Ecological implications of losses to SLV habitat availability include recovery of the federally endangered Rio Grande Silvery Minnow Hybognathus amarus.
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