Interactions between fine-grained sediment delivery, river bed deposition and salmonid spawning success

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Pattison, I., Sear, D. A., Jones, J. I. and Naden, P. S. 2015. Interactions between fine-grained sediment delivery, river bed deposition and salmonid spawning success. Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences. 367, pp. 199-206. https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-367-199-2015

AuthorsPattison, I., Sear, D. A., Jones, J. I. and Naden, P. S.
Abstract

Salmonids clean river bed gravels to lay their eggs. However, during the incubation period fine sediment infiltrates the bed. This has been found to limit the success of salmonid spawning, as fine sediment reduces gravel permeability resulting in intra-gravel flow velocities and O2 concentrations decreasing. The success of salmonid spawning is therefore a function of the coincidence of fine sediment delivery and the development of the salmonid eggs. The presence of fine sediment also exerts sub-lethal effects on the rate of egg development with a negative feedback slowing and extending the incubation process meaning the eggs are in the gravels for longer and susceptible to more potential sediment delivery events. The SIDO (Sediment Intrusion and Dissolved Oxygen)-UK model is a physically-based numerical model which simulates the effect of fine sediment deposition on the abiotic characteristics of the salmonid redd, along with the consequences for egg development and survival. This model is used to investigate the interactions and feedbacks between the timing and concentrations of suspended sediment delivery events, and the deposition of fine sediment within the gravel bed, and the consequences of this on the rate of egg development and survival. The model simulations suggest that egg survival is highly sensitive to suspended sediment concentrations, particularly to changes in the supply rate of sand particles. The magnitude, frequency and specific timing of sediment delivery events effects egg survival rates. The modelling framework is also used to investigate the impact of the rate of gravel infilling by sediment.

Keywordsfine sediment; deposition; salmonoids; numerical modelling
Year of Publication2015
JournalProceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences
Journal citation367, pp. 199-206
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-367-199-2015
Web address (URL)http://www.proc-iahs.net/367/199/2015/piahs-367-199-2015.pdf
Open accessPublished as green open access
FunderDepartment of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
Funder project or codeExtending the evidence base on the ecological impacts of fine sediment and developing a framework for targeting mitigation of agricultural sediment losses
Publisher's version
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online03 Mar 2015
ISSN01447815
PublisherInt Assoc Hydrological Sciences
International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS)
Copyright licenseCC BY
ISBN9781907161452
Collective title Sediment Dynamics from the Summit to the Sea Proceedings of a symposium held in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, 11–14 December 2014) (IAHS Publ 367, 199-206, 2014
EditorsXu, Y. J., Allison, M. A., Bentley, S. J., Collins, A. L., Erskine, W. D., Golosov, V., Horowitz, A. J. and Stone, M.

Permalink - https://repository.rothamsted.ac.uk/item/8v3vx/interactions-between-fine-grained-sediment-delivery-river-bed-deposition-and-salmonid-spawning-success

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