Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2318218764> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 90 of
90
with 100 items per page.
- W2318218764 endingPage "402" @default.
- W2318218764 startingPage "402" @default.
- W2318218764 abstract "The 107-year record of daily water elevations for the upper Mississippi River (UMR) at Burlington, Iowa, was examined to assess changes in hydrologic patterns and floodplain availability resulting from dam and levee construction. Following completion of Lock and Dam 19 in 1913, mean low, mean high and overall mean water levels significantly increased (P <0.05). Floodplain habitat was permanently inundated. Establishment of extensive levee and drainage districts adjacent to Pool 19 resulted in additional loss of floodplain. Generalized annual hydrographs indicated the spring rise in water elevation had been shortened in the postdam period and an autumn rise evident in the predam hydrograph was absent in the postdam hydrograph. Temporal reduction in floodplain availability along with spatial losses caused by inundation and leveeing aggravates the situation for floodplain-dependent species. Detrimental consequences of floodplain loss can, however, be diminished through reduction of levee and drainage districts, thereby promoting interaction between floodplain habitat and the river system. INTRODUCTION Large rivers of the world are increasingly managed and impounded (Petts, 1984). An immediate impact of impoundment is readily apparent in the restriction of such migratory species as salmon (Mundie, 1979; Stanford and Ward, 1979) and the skipjack herring (Coker, 1930). Management, however, usually involves more than restriction of potamodromous movement because changes in hydrologic regime, habitat type, and floodplain availability frequently accompany dam construction. In large rivers, floodplains and regular floodplain inundations are critical to a variety of aquatic and terrestrial fauna (Davies, 1979; Goulding, 1980; Petts, 1984), and floodplain vegetation represents the major source of organic matter within such systems (Edwards and Meyer, 1987). The importance of the floodplain to large temperate-river ecosystems has been noted by Whitley and Campbell (1974), who reported that important fish species were eliminated from a reach of the Missouri River due to impoundment and subsequent loss of wetlands. Similar losses of the fishery occurred on the Illinois River when manmade levees eliminated interaction between the river and floodplain and backwater lake habitats (Starrett, 1972; Sparks and Starrett, 1975). The Mississippi River has been characterized as a completely modified floodplain river (Gerking, 1977; Welcomme, 1979; Cooper, 1980). The completion or closure in 1913 of Lock and Dam 19 at Keokuk, Iowa, was one of the first major perturbations of the upper Mississippi River (UMR) (Scarpino, 1985). Early studies of its impact described reduced passage of migratory fish species and associated mussel populations (Coker, 1914; Coker, 1930), reduction of the mussel fishery due to increased sedimentation (Ellis, 1931), and the influence of lake-like conditions on riverine planktonic populations (Galtsoff, 1923). Early records of postdam water elevations were not extensive enough to assess changes in hydrologic patterns and subsequent results of floodplain loss. Coker (1914) went so far as to speculate that although the dam restricted migra-" @default.
- W2318218764 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2318218764 creator A5077117805 @default.
- W2318218764 creator A5078612036 @default.
- W2318218764 date "1988-04-01" @default.
- W2318218764 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W2318218764 title "Spatial and Temporal Availability of Floodplain Habitat: Long-Term Changes at Pool 19, Mississippi River" @default.
- W2318218764 cites W1573339297 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W1573678131 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W172202025 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W1989106092 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W1993653965 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2004527138 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2016413679 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2022994479 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2039718806 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2082635481 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2116544104 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2181310258 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2328034939 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2469946540 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2488635233 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2563355575 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2589439853 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2625534906 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W2884441955 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W49280807 @default.
- W2318218764 cites W82019541 @default.
- W2318218764 doi "https://doi.org/10.2307/2425823" @default.
- W2318218764 hasPublicationYear "1988" @default.
- W2318218764 type Work @default.
- W2318218764 sameAs 2318218764 @default.
- W2318218764 citedByCount "33" @default.
- W2318218764 countsByYear W23182187642012 @default.
- W2318218764 countsByYear W23182187642013 @default.
- W2318218764 countsByYear W23182187642017 @default.
- W2318218764 countsByYear W23182187642018 @default.
- W2318218764 countsByYear W23182187642019 @default.
- W2318218764 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2318218764 hasAuthorship W2318218764A5077117805 @default.
- W2318218764 hasAuthorship W2318218764A5078612036 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C155681218 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C185933670 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C187320778 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C39432304 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C505870484 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C58640448 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C61797465 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C76886044 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C121332964 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C127313418 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C155681218 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C185933670 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C187320778 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C18903297 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C205649164 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C39432304 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C505870484 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C58640448 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C61797465 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C62520636 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C76886044 @default.
- W2318218764 hasConceptScore W2318218764C86803240 @default.
- W2318218764 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2318218764 hasLocation W23182187641 @default.
- W2318218764 hasOpenAccess W2318218764 @default.
- W2318218764 hasPrimaryLocation W23182187641 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W1545569697 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W1906964483 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W1996235164 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W2007310846 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W2035221911 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W2092320989 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W2155499159 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W2913720755 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W4293766912 @default.
- W2318218764 hasRelatedWork W4300002950 @default.
- W2318218764 hasVolume "119" @default.
- W2318218764 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2318218764 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2318218764 magId "2318218764" @default.
- W2318218764 workType "article" @default.