Litcius/Paper detail

Why wood should move in rivers

Ellen Wohl, Hiromi Uno, Sarah B. Dunn, John T. Kemper, Anna Marshall, Mickey Means‐Brous, Julianne Scamardo, Shayla Triantafillou

2023River Research and Applications44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Large wood is inherently mobile in naturally functioning river corridors, yet river management commonly introduces wood that is anchored to limit hazards. Wood that is periodically mobilized is important for: replacing stationary large wood that performs diverse physical and ecological functions; contributing to the disturbance regime of the river corridor; diversifying wood decay states; dispersing organisms and propagules; providing refugia during floodplain inundation and in mobile‐bed channels; dissipating flow energy; and supplying wood to downstream environments including lakes, coastlines, the open ocean, and the deep sea. We briefly review what is known about large wood mobility in river corridors and suggest priorities for ongoing research and river management, including: structural designs that can pass mobile wood; enhancing piece diversity of introduced wood that is anchored in place; quantifying wood mobilization and transport characteristics in natural and managed river corridors; and enhancing documentation of the benefits of wood mobility.

Topics & Concepts

FloodplainPropaguleEnvironmental scienceDisturbance (geology)River managementHydrology (agriculture)EcologyEnvironmental resource managementGeologyGeotechnical engineeringPaleontologyBiologyHydrology and Sediment Transport ProcessesForest Ecology and Biodiversity StudiesSoil erosion and sediment transport