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RESEARCH: Warmwater Stream Bank Protection and Fish Habitat: A Comparative Study
Authors:F. D. Shields   Jr.  S. S. Knight  C. M. Cooper
Affiliation:(1) Water Quality and Ecological Processes Research Unit, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, National Sedimentation Laboratory, P.O. Box 1157, Oxford, Mississippi 38655-1157, USA , US
Abstract:/ Fishes and their habitats were sampled in Harland Creek, Mississippi, for 3 years to compare the relative value of three types of bank treatment in an incised, warmwater stream. Semiannual samples were collected from 10 reaches: 3 reaches protected by each of the three types of protection (longitudinal stone toe, stone spurs, and dormant willow posts) and an unprotected, slowly eroding bend. Protection of concave banks of bends had no measurable effect on the habitat quality of downstream riffles. Although bends and adjacent downstream riffles were faunistically similar at the species level, catostomids and centrarchids were more dominant in pools and smaller cyprinids more dominant in riffles. Reaches with willow posts were slightly deeper than the others, most likely because of geomorphic factors rather than bank treatment. Mean water surface widths in reaches stabilized with stone spurs were 40% to 90% greater than for other treatments, and current velocities were greatest in reaches with stone toe. Patterns of fish abundance and species diversity did not differ significantly among treatments. However, principal components analysis indicated that the fish species distribution associated with the untreated reference site was distinct. Reaches stabilized with stone spurs supported significantly higher densities of large fish and higher levels of fish biomass per unit channel length than reaches with other bank treatments, generally confirming previous research in the region. Initial costs for spurs were comparable to those for stone toe and about three times greater than for willow posts.
Keywords:: Streambank erosion   Stream bank protection   Fish   Habitat   Stream restoration
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