Saturday, 9 January 2010

River restoration

This is an exciting time to be involved in river ecology. Not only is river restoration becoming more research focused but the river itself is now seen as a system directly connected to landscapes by numerous processes and feedbacks. These riverscapes are constantly interacting with landscapes through hydrological connectivity and interspecies relationships meaning that the river is an integral component of the wider ecology of a catchment. More than this the morphology, ecology and quality of a river is governed by processes that work at catchment scales. For example in the headwaters of a stream it is the hydrological flow paths emerging at the upper reaches of the landscape that govern instream flow rates, discharge, sediment and nutrient delivery, river morphology and finally in-stream ecosystems.

In the past this lack of spatial context has often resulted in restoration that fails due to rivers not being viewed as am emergent response of the catchment. Tackling eroding river banks is a case in point. Management and restoration has often focused on the immediate surroundings of the issue, such as putting in place buffer strips, shoring up or reprofiling the bank. This is despite eroding banks being a symptom of upstream processes such as soil compaction, drainage or deforestation which all increase the speed at which water reaches the channel network and thus the erosive power of a river.

Now that these connections are being made river restoration is becoming process orientated and thus more likely to be succesful. Whilst this is exciting it also poses numerous difficulties. One such issue is that working on one location can result in the need to work with multiple land owners (as the focus shifts to upstream processes) some of whom are more receptive then others. This requires skills that go beyond knowledge of river systems into social science and negotiation and may require teams of multi-disciplinary practitioners in order to develop plans and inform land managers. Where such teams are in place river restoration is becoming more succesful and populations of indicator species such as salmon and trout are becoming re-established.

Thursday, 7 January 2010

Winter in the Yorkshire Dales



Winter has hit the dales in a way it hasnt for decades. The riverscapes are surrounded in white that glistens in the low winter sun. Sheep huddle together behind walls waiting for deliveries of food that arrives by tractor which, despite their traction, also slip across the surface. The rivers are running low as all the precipitation is stored in snow and ice, the freezing nights keeping water locked up.

Cars have deep coverings of snow and roads look like gorges as the ploughs scrape them free of snow leaving steep edges on either side. The forecast suggests we have at least two more weeks of this and with drifts already reaching above head height the next days promise impresive sights.



The thaw is held up by the sub zero temperatures dipping to -8 in the dales and colder still the further north one travels. When this huge store of water eventually flows the rivers are set to rise substantially. The worst case scenario for those living in towns downstream of here is a rapid temperature rise coupled with rain. Such conditions will undoubtedly lead to flooding, and misery, for many.

Research into land management suggests that compacted soils and extensive drainage exacerbates flooding by shifting water rapidly from land to river resulting in sharp spikes in the hydrograph. The key to the next few years, as we move towards the prescriptions of the EU Water Framework Directive, is to understand how land management effects water and more importantly identify methods for improving conditions whilst making sure upland farmers do not lose income. This is an exciting time for freshwater ecology as local scale perspectives are stretched to the catchment scale which provides many of the controlling factors on river ecology and quality.

The incredible thing is that the whole country is white, smothered in deep drifts and layers of weeks of snow. Satelite photos from NASA display this strange image of the UK. It looks like not only Yorkshire rivers are at risk. In the meantime the landscape looks fantastic and we all hope the thaw occurs in a slow, steady manner.