Contrasting stream stability characteristics in adjacent urban watersheds: Santa Clara Valley, California

Autor: W. K. Annable, Dipankar Sen, B. A. Jordan, C. C. Watson
Rok vydání: 2010
Předmět:
Zdroj: River Research and Applications. 26:1281-1297
ISSN: 1535-1459
DOI: 10.1002/rra.1333
Popis: A comparative study of two adjacent stream channels in the Santa Clara Valley region of California provided an opportunity to study the relative effects of multi-faceted watershed-urbanization impacts on channel evolution and stability. Berryessa Creek (15.5 km2) and Upper Penitencia Creek (61.3 km2) have similar intrinsic watershed characteristics; however, urbanization processes have imposed distinctly different evolutionary trends in each watershed. The influences of drainage network manipulation, hydrologic routing and engineering infrastructure has resulted in Upper Penitencia Creek remaining relatively stable throughout the course of urbanization, while Berryessa Creek has experienced system-wide channel instability problems. This study enumerates the many anthropogenic impacts and provides insight into basin alterations that can have either positive or negative feedbacks in maintaining or degrading channel stability throughout the course of urbanization. Results show that infrastructure that disrupts the bed material sediment continuity (such as large drop structures or sedimentation ponds) generate long-term downstream channel instabilities leading to channel degradation and continued maintenance. Off-line flow diversions (in this study percolation ponds) that do not disrupt bed material transport can emulate pre-urbanization conditions offsetting channel degradation resulting from changes in hydrology. This study also demonstrates the degradational responses of a stream due to losses in riparian vegetation from water table lowering transforming a perennial stream into an ephemeral stream resulting in increased bank instability. The importance of maintaining floodplains for flood access and channel stability has also been identified and compared to conditions of channel encroachment to facilitate maintenance, which have further exacerbated downstream channel degradation, long-term channel maintenance and dredging. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Databáze: OpenAIRE