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Processes of Tamarix invasion and floodplain development along the lower Green River, Utah.

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David J Cooper, and Adam S Birken, Processes of Tamarix invasion and floodplain development along the lower Green River, Utah.: .

Summary

Significant ecological, hydrologic, and geomorphic changes have occurred during the 20th century along many large floodplain rivers in the American Southwest. Native Populus forests have declined, while the exotic Eurasian shrub, Tamarix, has proliferated and now dominates most floodplain ecosystems. Photographs from late 19th and early 20th centuries illustrate wide river channels with largely bare in-channel landforms and shrubby higher channel margin floodplains. However, by the mid-20th century, floodplains supporting dense Tamarix stands had expanded, and river channels had narrowed. Along the lower Green River in eastern Utah, the causal mechanism of channel and floodplain changes remains ambiguous due to the confounding effects [...]

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Wed Dec 08 22:27:33 CST 2010

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Title Citation Processes of Tamarix invasion and floodplain development along the lower Green River, Utah.

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