The where and why of large wood occurrence in the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers

Author:

Van Appledorn Molly1ORCID,Jankowski KathiJo1ORCID,Gahm Kaija2,Budd Serenity3ORCID,Baumann Douglas4,Bennie Barbara5,Erickson Richard1ORCID,Haro Roger6,Rohweder Jason1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center La Crosse Wisconsin USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, School of Medicine Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USA

4. Department of Mathematics and Statistics University of Wisconsin–La Crosse La Crosse Wisconsin USA

5. Gundersen Research Institute Gundersen Health System La Crosse Wisconsin USA

6. College of the Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractLarge wood (LW) plays important geomorphic and ecological roles in rivers and is widely used as a restoration tool. Changes to floodplain land use and historical removal have altered wood dynamics in fluvial systems globally. We know little about the distribution and dynamics of LW in great rivers (approximately >105 km2) like the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers despite its ecosystem importance and use in restoration projects. We assessed LW occurrence data collected by the fisheries component of the Upper Mississippi River Restoration Program's Long Term Resource Monitoring element. We analysed 25 years of data collected across six reaches of the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers that represented contrasting physiographic settings, and across four aquatic area types comprising gradients of hydrology, connectivity and geomorphology. We tested hypotheses on drivers of LW occurrence using generalised linear mixed effects models, where occurrence was predicted by reach‐ and local‐scale environmental variables. Occurrence varied significantly across reaches and aquatic area types. In general, wood occurred more frequently upriver and in side channels compared to other aquatic areas. Large wood was most strongly predicted systemically by reach identity but not local‐scale variables, underscoring the importance of broad‐scale physiographic gradients in defining hydrogeomorphic processes. Floodplain forests and shoreline revetment were consistently important predictors across reaches. Our findings show that the spatial variability of LW occurrence reflects the physical variability of the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. They also reveal the value in using geomorphic classifications as frameworks for understanding physical processes like LW dynamics because of their ability to contextualise site‐scale conditions. The baseline understanding of LW abundance across different hydrogeomorphic gradients and scales presented here can give insight into how to more effectively target restoration efforts in great rivers and contribute to a broader understanding of LW dynamics where such studies have been lacking.

Publisher

Wiley

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