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GRASS VERSUS TREES: MANAGING RIPARIAN AREAS TO BENEFIT STREAMS OF CENTRAL NORTH AMERICA

Forestation of riparian areas has long been promoted to restore stream ecosystems degraded by agriculture in Central North America. Although trees and shrubs in the riparian zone can provide many benefits to streams, grassy or herbaceous riparian vegetation can also provide benefits and may be more...

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Published in:Journal of the American Water Resources Association 2000-08, Vol.36 (4), p.919-930
Main Authors: Lyons, John, Thimble, Stanley W., Paine, Laura K
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Language:English
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container_title Journal of the American Water Resources Association
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creator Lyons, John
Thimble, Stanley W.
Paine, Laura K
description Forestation of riparian areas has long been promoted to restore stream ecosystems degraded by agriculture in Central North America. Although trees and shrubs in the riparian zone can provide many benefits to streams, grassy or herbaceous riparian vegetation can also provide benefits and may be more appropriate in some situations. Here we review some of the positive and negative implications of grassy versus wooded riparian zones and discuss potential management outcomes. Compared to wooded areas, grassy riparian areas result in stream reaches with different patterns of bank stability, erosion, channel morphology, cover for fish, terrestrial runoff, hydrology, water temperature, organic matter inputs, primary production, aquatic macroinvertebrates, and fish. Of particular relevance in agricultural regions, grassy riparian areas may be more effective in reducing bank erosion and trapping suspended sediments than wooded areas. Maintenance of grassy riparian vegetation usually requires active management (e.g., mowing, burning, herbicide treatments, and grazing), as successional processes will tend ultimately to favor woody vegetation. Riparian agricultural practices that promote a dense, healthy, grassy turf, such as certain types of intensively managed livestock grazing, have potential to restore degraded stream ecosystems.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1752-1688.2000.tb04317.x
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection
subjects Agriculture
aquatic ecosystems
Banks (bodies of water)
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Ecosystems
Engineering and environment geology. Geothermics
Erosion
Exact sciences and technology
Freshwater
hydrobiology
Hydrology
Hydrology. Hydrogeology
Land use
land use planning
nonpoint source pollution
Pollution, environment geology
riparian vegetation
Runoff
sedimentation
Sediments
stream restoration
Vegetation
watershed management
Watersheds
title GRASS VERSUS TREES: MANAGING RIPARIAN AREAS TO BENEFIT STREAMS OF CENTRAL NORTH AMERICA
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