Flow variability maintains the structure and composition of in-channel riparian vegetation

angus.webb@unimelb.edu.au on 04 Oct 2021
Back to citations

All evidence records currently entered in EcoEvidEx for this citation are shown below.
An evidence record consists of an association between two variables, plus information about the nature of that relationship, the study design by which it was observed, and environmental context.
Click on an evidence record below to view or edit the complete evidence record.
Click 'Add evidence' to add a new evidence record for this citation, or copy an existing evidence record by selecting that record then using the 'Duplicate evidence' option.

Author(s)
GREET, J., WEBB, J. A., & DOWNES, B. J.
Year
2011
Title
Flow variability maintains the structure and composition of in-channel riparian vegetation
Source
Freshwater Biology
Volume
56
Issue
12
Pages
2514-2528
ISSN/ISBN
0046-5070
Abstract

1. Naturally variable river flows are considered to be important for structuring riparian vegetation. However, while the importance of floods for the ecology of riparian vegetation is well recognised, much less is known about the importance of small fluctuations in river flows.

2. We investigated the effect of water supply diversion weirs on the riparian vegetation of upland streams. These weirs remove within-channel fluctuations in flow but do not prevent large floods downstream. We surveyed the in-channel and banktop vegetation of five streams, three of which were regulated by weirs and two of which acted as controls.

3. Unexpectedly, we observed greater species richness within the channel downstream of the weirs. This was because of increased numbers of exotic and terrestrial (‘dry’) plant species. Grass cover was also greater downstream of the weirs. There were no significant differences in the banktop vegetation between the upstream and downstream sites of the regulated streams.

4. Our results highlight the role of within-channel flow variability in maintaining the composition of vegetation within the stream channel. We suggest that greater species richness does not necessarily indicate a less-disturbed environment. Rather, a greater number of ‘dry’ species is indicative of the impacts of flow regulation.

5. Small fluctuations in river flows are probably necessary to protect the ecosystem structure and function of regulated streams. It is recommended that variable within-channel flows be provided in regulated streams.

Evidence

Cause Effect Response measure type Habitat Country Modified
Hydrology - surface flow (variability) (Decrease)
Small dams cause a decrease in flow variability, removing a lot of the flow fluctuations downstream, although they do not prevent large floods that over-top the structures.
Plants (riparian) - richness (Increase)
There was a greater number of plant species found within the channel (but not looking at aquatic plants) in the sites downstream of dams. This was mostly driven by a greater number of 'dry' life history specialists and greater number of grass taxa.
F statistic/ratio Stream/river Australia 04-Oct-2021