CIVE 633 - ENVIRONMENTAL HYDROLOGY
THE RIVER CONTINUUM CONCEPT
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- There is a difference between small rivers (streams) and large rivers from the ecological perspective.
- The ecological perspective includes productivity (primary and secondary), carbon dynamics, nutrient cycling, biodiversity,
hydrologic interactions, hydraulic effects.
- Dams, lakes and swamps separate rivers into reaches with different ecological characteristics.
- Large rivers have frequent transversal interactions with the flood plain, which small rivers don't have.
The River Continuum Concept (RCC)
- The RCC treats the river network as a continuous series of physical, chemical and biological adjustments along the length of the river,
and uses a stream in a temperate climate as an example of application.
- RCC views rivers as longitudinal elements, in which the processes in downstrem reaches are linked to those in the upstream reaches.
- The conceptual model has been criticized because rivers may not have a continuous ecological behavior from headwaters to sea.
- Can the RCC explain the behavior of large rivers? Are large rivers longitudinally continuous from an ecological standpoint?
RCC, GEOMORPHOLOGY AND RIVER-FOREST INTERACTIONS
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- The RCC provides the most useful predictions of longitudinal lotic ecosystem characteristics for river systems
with geological constraints.
- Where there is interaction with the flood plain, the prediction is not as good.
- The amount of flood plain interaction is constrained by geology and geomorphology.
- Large variability of depths, widths and velocities lead to increased productivity, and better developed trophic chains.
- The RCC is of limited value for predicting large river ecosystem function.
- The research challenge is to determine how ecologically important processes at the reach level can be meaningfully aggregated
to large river systems.
- Interaction between the disciplines (ecologists, fisheries biologists, biogeochemists, atmospheric scientists, engineers, geomorphologists,
and hydrologists) is the present challenge.
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