Fish and other aquatic biota that live in rivers and streams have to contend with the variability of the flow regime. How variable is runoff/discharge?

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Fish and other aquatic biota that live in rivers and streams have to contend with the variability of the flow regime. How variable is runoff/discharge? From year to year? From month to month From day to day

Crowsnest River –4 th order, around 3-4 m 3 /sec—10-20 m wide DA around 400 km2

Annual mean discharge of the Crowsnest River at Frank m 3 /s 20

Annual mean discharge of the Crowsnest River at Frank m 3 /s Exceedence probability percentile 75 percentile 50 percentile 25 percentile 10 percentile

o o o We can now plot these data on cumulative probability paper Non-exceedence probability (percentiles) Based on this plot we can estimate that 1 year in 100 there will be a year wetter than 20m 3 /s and a year drier than 0.8 m 3 /s, if there is no-longterm climate change Discharge m 3 /sec Exceedance probability (percentiles) o o Recurrence interval is the reciprocal of the probability

1 yr out of 4 discharge is above this line 3 yr out of 4 discharge above this line Annual average 2.7 m3/s 2 yr out of 4 discharge above this line Annual average 4.1 m3/s Annual average 6.0 m3/s

River Management can significantly alter the seasonal hydrograph Before Ottawa R dams After Ottawa R dams

St.Lawrence River Flood Plain at Lac St. Pierre—has rarely been flooded since the late fifties—What effect might this have on the river?

The hydrograph Short-term response to a precipitation event How would you expect deforestation to influence this response? ---Consider the terms of the hydrological balance equation

Human activities can markedly influence the shape of the hydrograph Deforestation reduces the lag time raises the peak reduces the base flow Fig 5-2 in your text How does deforestation affect the hydrological balance [P-E]DA –  S/  t

The hysteresis curve can be used to estimate the storage capacity Discharge m3/sec Precipation For a system with no storage capacity like a storm sewer, the hydrograph will tend to stick close to the center line

Patterns in stream flow and how they generate habitat diversity in streams Annual discharge patterns—floodplain habitats Stream meander—pool/riffle alternations Stream channel changes over time—oxbow lakes, braided streams

Flood plain habitats greatly increase biodiversity in river systems. They contribute mostly temporary wetlands, but some remain as permanent because of groundwater inputs. Important for Waterfowl, mammals, amphibians, fish, aquatic insects, molluscs etc. Most of the species found in flood plain wetlands would be lost from the river if the floodplain were not allowed to be flooded regularly. Flood plains depend on seasonal variability in river discharge

Oxbow lake and the Chippewa River. Eau Claire, Wisconsin. River flood plains often undergo extensive urban development

Many are also strongly impacted by agriculture

Meander pattern of the Sacramento River, CA, note old abandoned channels and oxbows, and the encroachment of agriculture on the river channel.

Such restoration can involve breaching of levees and removal of dams with the aim of.re-establishing natural floodplain vegetation and habitat Green River, Wyoming

meanders In streams and rivers of different sizes

Rivers meander when they are traveling on top of a relatively flat surface. a straight line is not the most efficient path for water to flow. A meandering river will dissipate more energy through friction with the riverbed than one that flows straight The meander pattern shifts constantly since the river is cutting the bank on the outside of meander loops and depositing alluvial sediment on the inside.

Streams flow down hill and take the path of least resistance, however the path is usually a meandering instead of straight

It takes more velocity to suspend and move larger particles

Oxbow lake forming from a river meander The erosion that occurs during a flood even may cause the river to take a shortcut from one loop to the next--thus cutoff loop will remain as an oxbow lake.

Oxbow lakes and braided channels on the Upper Amazon River

An important reference on River Meanders Leopold, L.B., and M.G. Wolman, 1960, River Meanders: Geol. Soc. America, Bull., v. 71, pp The physical stresses on the river bed during floods often cause a river to change course. The river valley contains many old channels superimposed on each other

A good example of braiding in the river channel Rivers often simultaneously occupy several of their historical channels at once. We call this type of river channel braided

Oldman R Below Summerview Showing old river channels

When rivers cut deeply into the landscape the meander pattern becomes entrenched and from then on shifts downward only.

If you want to learn more about the landforms and deposits created by running water, with particular reference to western Canadian watersheds, take Geography 3035 Fluvial Geomorphology—Bob Rogerson Other courses of relevence are Geography 4015 Integrated Watershed Management—Jim Byrne And Geography 4012 Hydrology—Stefan Kienzle

Runoff map (mm)

Modelling IFN (instream flow needs) of fish—linking discharge to fish habitat

1 yr out of 4 discharge is above this line 3 yr out of 4 discharge above this line Annual average 0.38 m3/s 2 yr out of 4 discharge above this line Annual average 0.54 m3/s Annual average 0.80 m3/s

Sutcliffe, W.H Correlations between seasonal river discharge and landings of American Lobster and Atlantic halibat in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. J.Fish. Res. Bd. Can. 30: