Author:
Berg Neil,Carlson Ann,Azuma David
Abstract
In 1993, we located, measured, and tagged almost 1700 woody debris pieces on six streams in Californias central Sierra Nevada. The stability, geomorphic function, and use by fish for cover of each piece were recorded. In 1994 and 1995, piece movement was quantified and new debris pieces were measured. In the 60 study reaches, debris was not influential in shaping channel morphology and fish cover. Although woody debris was often associated with habitat units, few pieces deflected flow or contributed to the formation of pools or steps. Fish used deep water as cover more often than debris or any other cover type. Medium-sized debris was, however, used in a greater proportion than its availability to fish. Little sediment was stored by debris, and five large pieces stored 85% of the sediment volume measured. Debris frequency and volume did not differ significantly by channel type. After a low stream flow year (19931994), few pieces had moved and few new pieces were identified. After a high-flow season (19941995), 31% of the pieces had either moved or were not found and new pieces represented over 5% of the originally surveyed volume of wood.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
76 articles.
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