Widén, Åsa
- Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
This work examines the relationships between flow restoration, natural flow regimes and riparian vegetation utilizing a case study in northern Sweden. The riparian zone is one of the most species-rich ecosystems and forms an important link between aquatic and terrestrial systems. The integrity of the riparian zone and its vegetation is harmed by flow alteration in numerous rivers, which calls for enhancing riparian management and ecological mitigation measures. Here, we take an ecohydraulic approach, combining a hydraulic model and data on inundation tolerance of riparian vegetation to evaluate the effects of reintroducing seasonal flow variation in a bypassed reach with minimum discharge. The results show that implementing the seasonal flow variation is projected to benefit riparian vegetation by extending the riparian zone and to lead to the development of distinct vegetation belts similar to riparian vegetation along free-flowing rivers. Additional simulations demonstrated that a further increase in riparian area could be achieved by increasing the magnitude of the minimum flow release. While the method assumes the riparian vegetation to be in equilibrium with the flow regime, continued monitoring is needed to assess how fast the riparian vegetation adjusts to new flow conditions.
Riparian vegetation; seasonal flow; environmental flows; river regulation; flow restoration; hydraulic simulation
Journal of Ecohydraulics
2025
Publisher: TAYLOR AND FRANCIS LTD
Oceanography, Hydrology, Water Resources
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/144894