River Habitat Quality from River Velocities Measured Using Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler |
| |
Authors: | F. Douglas Shields Jr J. R. Rigby |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) National Sedimentation Laboratory , US Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service , PO Box 1157, 598 McElroy Drive, Oxford, Mississippi, 38655-1157;(2) Civil and Environmental Engineering Department , Imperial College , London, U.K. |
| |
Abstract: | Prior research has demonstrated the utility of metrics based on spatial velocity gradients to characterize and describe stream habitat, with higher gradients generally indicative of higher levels of physical heterogeneity and thus habitat quality. However, detailed velocity data needed to compute these metrics are difficult to obtain. Acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCP) may be used to rapidly collect detailed representations of river velocity fields. Herein we demonstrate use of ADCP to obtain ecologically relevant data and compute associated metrics. Data were collected from four reaches of the Little Tallahatchie River in northern Mississippi. Sampled reaches were selected to observe velocity regimes associated with three distinctly different conditions: downstream from a major flow obstruction (a low weir), downstream from the apices of each of two bends, and within an extremely long, straight reach created by channelization. Three-dimensional velocity data sets from each site were used to compute metrics of habitat quality proposed by others. A habitat metric based on the presence of rotational flow in the vertical plane proved to be the best discriminator among conditions within the sampled reaches. Two of four habitat quality metrics computed from these measured velocities were greatest for the sharpest meander bend. ADCP hold great potential for study of riverine physical aquatic habitats, particularly at the reach scale. Additional work is needed to develop generally applicable field protocols and data reduction tools. Specifically, guidelines for ADCP settings and configuration appropriate for a range of riverine site conditions must be developed. Advances in instrumentation are needed to allow collection of information in closer proximity to the free surface and solid boundaries. |
| |
Keywords: | Rivers Habitat Acoustic Doppler current profiler Current Velocity gradients Metrics |
本文献已被 PubMed SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|