Physical and ecological organization in a large, gravel-bed river and response to disturbance

Laura L. Rempel
2004
Along the 80-km gravel reach between Hope and Mission, Fraser River has a wandering morphology that includes secondary channels, gravel bars, and islands that together support a diverse and productive ecosystem. The wandering morphology is produced, in part, by annual sediment deposition within the reach. Sediment deposition, however, is perceived as a threat to flood security and gravel mining is proposed as a profitable solution to flood risk. This thesis presents a hierarchical habitat
more » ... fication for the gravel reach, which provided a spatial framework to, first, examine habitat associations of benthic invertebrates and fish and, second, evaluate the physical and ecological responses to habitat disturbance by gravel mining. At the highest level of the classification, the river is divided into 5 sub-reaches (104 m scale) that vary in morphological expression and sediment gradational tendency. The intermediate level specifies gravel bar units (103 m scale) each consisting of a riffle, gravel bar, and adjacent pool. Nested within gravel bars are physically distinct habitat units, which represent the finest level of the classification (101- 102 m scale). Results demonstrated that the assemblages of invertebrates and fish associated with habitats are moderately distinct and differentiated along a hydraulic gradient corresponding to velocity. However, the congruence between habitat structure and the structure of aquatic communities was weakened by large spatial and temporal variability in the distribution and abundances of many species. This variability was predicted to afford the invertebrate and fish community resilience to physical disturbance. The second component of this study examined the effect of disturbance by gravel mining from an exposed bar in 2000. Physical changes immediately after mining were substantial as the pre existing cobble surface was replaced by loose gravel and sand. Two subsequent freshets transformed the site into a topographically complex area with similar substra [...]
doi:10.14288/1.0104992 fatcat:ohcl35dsefhclopkinb4idn36y