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Extending the conceptual model of river island development to incorporate different tree species and environmental conditions

Riparian vegetation survival and establishment in gravel‐bed rivers depends on the balance between vegetation growth and flood disturbance. We present four examples of vegetation and landform development in gaps (linear open spaces) between established islands and/or floodplain within a reach of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:River research and applications 2020-10, Vol.36 (8), p.1730-1747
Main Authors: Gurnell, Angela M., Bertoldi, Walter
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Riparian vegetation survival and establishment in gravel‐bed rivers depends on the balance between vegetation growth and flood disturbance. We present four examples of vegetation and landform development in gaps (linear open spaces) between established islands and/or floodplain within a reach of the middle Tagliamento River, Italy. Gaps offer shelter to vegetation, supporting higher colonization success and different vegetation‐landform evolution pathways. Time sequences of aerial images track vegetation development over 30 years in the four gaps. In combination with the flood disturbance time series, we interpret vegetation dynamics and identify the fate of sexual and asexual reproduction strategies by observing vegetation expansion from lines of young plants and shrubs and from uprooted deposited trees and pioneer islands, respectively. Analysis of image sequences reveals common features across the four gaps that are generalized to extend a conceptual model of island development. Growing conditions, disturbance energy and time (window of opportunity) between major floods are the main controls on vegetation colonization. These vary among rivers, among reaches along the same river and locally, as in the investigated gaps, allowing different tree species with different life history traits (e.g., Populus nigra, Alnus incana) to engineer local river landforms in different and complementary ways. Although the conceptual model is inspired by observations on the Tagliamento River, consideration of species life history traits and the joint influences of growing conditions, disturbance energy and windows of opportunity provide a framework that may be applied to other temperate rivers where trees drive landform development.
ISSN:1535-1459
1535-1467
DOI:10.1002/rra.3691