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Effects of grade control structures on fish passage, biological assemblages, and hydraulic environments in western Iowa streams: a multidisciplinary review

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J.T. Thomas, M.E. Culler, D.C. Dermisis, Clay Pierce, A.N. Papanicolaou, T.W. Stewart, and C.J. Larson, 2011, Effects of grade control structures on fish passage, biological assemblages, and hydraulic environments in western Iowa streams: a multidisciplinary review: River Research and Applications, v. 29, iss. 3.

Summary

Land use changes and channelization of streams in the deep loess region of western Iowa have led to stream channel incision, altered flow regimes, increased sediment inputs, decreased habitat diversity and reduced lateral connectivity of streams and floodplains. Grade control structures (GCSs) are built in streams to prevent further erosion, protect infrastructure and reduce sediment loads. However, GCS can have a detrimental impact on fisheries and biological communities. We review three complementary biological and hydraulic studies on the effects of GCS in these streams. GCS with steep (≥1:4 rise : run) downstream slopes severely limited fish passage, but GCS with gentle slopes (≤1:15) allowed greater passage. Fish assemblages were [...]

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Harvested on Thu Jun 30 04:18:51 MDT 2016 from MODS XML Service

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Type Scheme Key
local-index unknown 70173591
local-pk unknown 70173591
doi http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/mods-outline-3-5.html#identifier doi:10.1002/rra.1600
series unknown River Research and Applications

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citationTypeArticle
journalRiver Research and Applications
languageEnglish
parts
typevolume
value29
typeissue
value3

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