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  • Flushing  (1)
  • channel maintenance  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1009
    Keywords: Flushing ; Scouring ; Channel Maintenance ; Fisheries ; Trinity River
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract The operation of Trinity and Lewiston Dams on the Trinity River in northern California in the United States, combined with severe watershed erosion, has jeopardized the existence of prime salmonid fisheries. Extreme streamflow depletion and stream sedimentation below Lewiston have resulted in heavy accumulation of coarse sediment on riffle gravel and filling of streambed pools, causing the destruction of spawning, nursery, and overwintering habitat for prized chinook salmon (Salmo gairdnerii) and steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus tschawytscha). Proposals to restore and maintain the degraded habitat include controlled one-time remedial peak flows or annual maintenance peak flows designed to flush the spawning gravel and scour the banks, deltas, and pools. The criteria for effective channel restoration or maintenance by streambed flushing and scouring are examined here, as well as the mechanics involved. The liabilities of releasing mammoth scouring-flushing flows approximating the magnitude that preceded reservoir construction make this option unviable. The resulting damage to fish habitat established under the postproject streamflow regime, as well as damage to human settlements in the floodplain, would be unacceptable, as would the opportunity costs to hydroelectric and irrigation water users. The technical feasibility of annual maintenance flushing flows depends upon associated mechanical and structural measures, particularly instream maintenance dredging of deep pools and construction of a sediment control dam on a tributary where watershed erosion is extreme. The cost effectiveness of a sediment dam with a limited useful economic life, combined with perpetual maintenance dredging, is questionable.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-1650
    Keywords: Waterfowl habitat ; streambed scouring, sand-bed river ; channel maintenance ; river regulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geography
    Notes: Abstract The planned Narrows Reservoir on the South Platte River in Colorado is expected to jeopardize the maintenance of scarce instream waterfowl habitat 400 km downstream in Nebraska's Big Bend reach of the mainstem Platte River. Extreme shrinkage of wide, shallow channel habitat for sandhill and endangered whooping cranes in the Central Flyway has resulted from past reservoir development along the North and South Platte Rivers in Wyoming and Colorado. Proposals to counteract further shrinkage caused by streamflow regulation and depletion include controlled annual peak flows designed to scour the banks, sandbars, and emerging vegetation. The criteria for effective channel maintenance by streambed scouring are examined, as well as the principles involved. The feasibility of preserving the remaining habitat by releasing scouring flows from the Narrows Dam is found seriously lacking. Alternative mechanical measures, such as dredging the channel and bulldozing the tree cover, may prove more practical, although possibly unaffordable.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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