Record Details

The effects of channel modification on characteristics of streams during low flow

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title The effects of channel modification on characteristics of streams during low flow
Names Atkinson, Brett (creator)
Beschta, Robert (advisor)
Date Issued 1992-06-09 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1993
Abstract Fluorescent dye was used to assess summer low flow
hydraulic retention and transient storage (dead zone)
associated with fish habitat structures at Camp Creek,
Drift Creek, and the East Fork of Lobster Creek within the
central Coast Range of Oregon. Utilizing channel units to
stratify stream reaches, the effect of instream structures
upon the hydraulic retention of pools was evaluated. The
cycling time of water into and out of storage was also
estimated by calculating an exchange coefficient.
Camp creek had a pre- and post-treatment design that
included unaltered, low, medium, and high levels of coarse
woody debris loading. Except for one Camp Creek channel
unit (CC21), major alterations to low flow channel unit
dimensions did not occur after treatment and the volume of
water in transient storage in the other treated channel
units was probably not altered. Intensive debris loading
increased the length of channel unit CC21 by 6 meters and
the average cross-sectional depth by 0.04 meters.
An "additional sums of squares" test was used to
evaluate whether there was a statistically significant
difference existing between Camp Creek pre- and posttreatment
simple linear regressions of transit time versus
debris loading and the average cross-sectional area,
depth, width, and velocity. The additional sums of
squares comparison did show that an increase in posttreatment
transit time was statistically significant
(p 0.10) when compared against debris additions that
were located within the low flow wetted perimeter of the
stream (wood influence Zone I).
Statistically significant (p 0.10) results for dye
plume and geomorphic variables for Drift Creek and Lobster
Creek are not presented as major conclusions because of a
lack of pretreatment control data. Qualitatively,
however, one-tailed t-test indicate that during summer
discharges, flow velocities and peak concentrations may
significantly decrease in treated channel units, compared
to the channel units that were assumed to be controls.
Intensive debris loading may enhance low flow
channel complexity by increasing turbulent mixing and
increasing the transit time of water. However, in this
study the largest amount of debris volume was located in
the cross-section of channel existing between low flow and
bankfull flow (wood influence Zone II). Thus, hydraulic
interaction with debris primarily occurs during winter
flows and storm flows when streampower is at its highest.
Genre Thesis
Topic Stream channelization -- Oregon, Western
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9298

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press