DISTURBANCE AND RECOVERY OF LARGE FLOODPLAIN RIVERS

被引:153
作者
SPARKS, RE [1 ]
BAYLEY, PB [1 ]
KOHLER, SL [1 ]
OSBORNE, LL [1 ]
机构
[1] ILLINOIS NAT HIST SURVEY,CTR AQUAT ECOL,CHAMPAIGN,IL 61820
关键词
Disturbance; Ecosystem; Illinois River; Mississippi River; Recovery; River;
D O I
10.1007/BF02394719
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Disturbance in a river-floodplain system is defined as an unpredictable event that disrupts structure or function at the ecosystem, community, or population level. Disturbance can result in species replacements or losses, or shifts of ecosystems from one persistent condition to another. A disturbance can be a discrete event or a graded change in a controlling factor that eventually exceeds a critical threshold. The annual flood is the major driving variable that facilitates lateral exchanges of nutrients, organic matter, and organisms. The annual flood is not normally considered a disturbance unless its timing or magnitude is "atypical." The record flood of 1973 had little effect on the biota at a long-term study site on the Mississippi River, but the absence of a flood during the 1976-1977 Midwestern drought caused short- and long-term changes. Body burdens of contaminants increased temporarily in key species, because of increased concentration resulting from reduced dilution. Reduced runoff and sediment input improved light penetration and increased the depth at which aquatic macrophytes could grow. Developing plant beds exerted a high degree of biotic control and were able to persist, despite the resumption of normal floods and turbidity in subsequent years. In contrast to the discrete event that disturbed the Mississippi River, a major confluent, the Illinois River, has been degraded by a gradual increase in sediment input and sediment resuspension. From 1958 to 1961 formerly productive backwaters and lakes along a 320-km reach of the Illinois River changed from clear, vegetated areas to turbid, barren basins. The change to a system largely controlled by abiotic factors was rapid and the degraded condition persists. Traditional approaches to experimental design are poorly suited for detecting control mechanisms and for determining the critical thresholds in large river-floodplains. Large river-floodplain systems cannot be manipulated or sampled as easily as small streams, and greater use should be made of man-made or natural disturbances and environmental restoration as opportunistic experiments to measure thresholds and monitor the recovery process. © 1990 Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:699 / 709
页数:11
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   PREDICTIVE QUALITY OF MACROINVERTEBRATE HABITAT ASSOCIATIONS IN LOWER NAVIGATION POOLS OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER [J].
ANDERSON, RV ;
DAY, DM .
HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1986, 136 :101-112
[2]  
Bellrose F.C., 1979, Illinois Natural History Survey Bulletin, V32, P1
[3]   1973 FLOOD AND MANS CONSTRICTION OF MISSISSIPPI RIVER [J].
BELT, CB .
SCIENCE, 1975, 189 (4204) :681-684
[4]   FATE OF NAVIGATION POOL ON MISSISSIPPI RIVER [J].
BHOWMIK, NG ;
ADAMS, JR ;
SPARKS, RE .
JOURNAL OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING-ASCE, 1986, 112 (10) :967-970
[5]  
CAIRNS J, 1987, RESTORATION ECOLOGY, P307
[6]   FROM HEADWATER STREAMS TO RIVERS [J].
CUMMINS, KW .
AMERICAN BIOLOGY TEACHER, 1977, 39 (05) :305-312
[7]  
Fisher S.G., 1983, P7
[8]  
GALTSOFF P, 1923, B BUREAU FISHERIES, V34, P347
[9]   UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER - SEASONAL AND FLOODPLAIN FOREST INFLUENCES ON ORGANIC-MATTER TRANSPORT [J].
GRUBAUGH, JW ;
ANDERSON, RV .
HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1989, 174 (03) :235-244
[10]  
GRUBAUGH JW, 1988, AM MIDL NAT, V19, P402