Citation Information

  • Title : Stream bed substrate composition adjacent to different riparian land-uses in Iowa, USA
  • Source : Ecological Engineering
  • Publisher : Elsevier
  • Volume : 37
  • Issue : 11
  • Pages : 1692–1699
  • Year : 2011
  • DOI : 10.1016/j.ecolen
  • ISBN : 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2011.06.029
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Schultz, R. C.
    • Zaimes, G. N.
  • Climates: Continental (D). Hot summer continental (Dsa, Dfa, Dwa).
  • Cropping Systems: Grazing systems. Conservation cropping systems.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

Extensive land-use changes in Iowa have increased erosional processes and the amount of fines deposited on stream beds. Large amounts of fines cover the other bed substrate that are essential habitat for invertebrates and fish. In Iowa and other agricultural Midwestern states, riparian conservation land-uses are being established to minimize sediment inputs to streams. This study compared stream bed substrate composition in reaches adjacent to: riparian forest buffers, grass filters, row-cropped fields, pastures with cattle fenced out of the stream and continuous, rotational and intensively grazed rotational pastures, in three regions of Iowa. The objective was to examine the impacts of the adjacent riparian land-uses on stream bed substrate composition. The percentages of fines in this study ranged from: 36 to 63% in the central region; 10 to 31% in the northeast region; and 22 to 85% in the southeast region. The high percentage of fines in most stream bed reaches indicates high embeddedness. The high embeddedness resulted in the few significant differences in substrate percentages among riparian land-uses. Decades of agricultural land-uses have heavily impacted stream beds and only significant reductions in surface and bank erosion at the watershed scale can begin to reverse this trend. There were indications that riparian forest buffers and to a lesser degree, pastures with cattle fenced out of the stream, could decrease fines resulting in a more diverse substrate composition. Overall, more targeted approaches for the establishment of conservation land-uses in combination with other restoration practices (e.g. in-stream enhancements) are required to successfully decrease fines on stream beds. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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