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The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality

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The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality. / Janes, Victoria; Grabowski, Robert; Mant, Jenny et al.
In: River Research and Applications, Vol. 33, No. 1, 01.2017, p. 89-101.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Janes, V, Grabowski, R, Mant, J, Allen, D, Morse, J & Haynes, H 2017, 'The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality', River Research and Applications, vol. 33, no. 1, pp. 89-101. https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3068

APA

Janes, V., Grabowski, R., Mant, J., Allen, D., Morse, J., & Haynes, H. (2017). The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality. River Research and Applications, 33(1), 89-101. https://doi.org/10.1002/rra.3068

Vancouver

Janes V, Grabowski R, Mant J, Allen D, Morse J, Haynes H. The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality. River Research and Applications. 2017 Jan;33(1):89-101. Epub 2016 Oct 11. doi: 10.1002/rra.3068

Author

Janes, Victoria ; Grabowski, Robert ; Mant, Jenny et al. / The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality. In: River Research and Applications. 2017 ; Vol. 33, No. 1. pp. 89-101.

Bibtex

@article{fe9c48843f8d4d4cbbfcfa35808b7240,
title = "The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality",
abstract = "Natural Flood Management (NFM) techniques aim to reduce downstream flooding by storing and slowing the flow of stormwater to river channels. These techniques include a range of measures, including setback stormwater outfalls and the physical restoration of channels and floodplains, to improve the natural functioning of catchments. An additional benefit of NFM measures is the potential reduction in sediment and pollutant delivery to the channel. Urban development releases a variety of heavy metal and nutrient pollutants that enter rivers through stormwater outfalls with adverse effects on the aquatic ecosystem. In this study, the influence of channel modification and quality of the river habitat on the sediment quality surrounding stormwater outfalls was assessed. Sediment samples were taken at several outfalls within the Johnson Creek catchment, Oregon, USA, and analysed for a variety of urban pollutants. The level of river habitat quality and modification at each site were assessed using a semi-quantitative scoring methodology. Significant increases in pollutant levels were observed at outfalls, with a greater and more variable increase at direct compared to setback outfalls. Removal efficiency of certain pollutants was found to be significantly correlated to the level of habitat quality or modification (for Fe, Ba, Sn, Mg, P, K) indicating that more natural reaches had greater potential for pollutant removal. The findings highlight the multiple benefits associated with NFM and river restoration approaches in relation to sediment quality and pollutant content. ",
keywords = "restoration, outfall, setback outfall, sediment, River Habitat Survey, pollutant, Natural Flood Management",
author = "Victoria Janes and Robert Grabowski and Jenny Mant and Deonie Allen and Jen Morse and Heather Haynes",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1002/rra.3068",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "89--101",
journal = "River Research and Applications",
issn = "1535-1459",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impacts of natural flood management approaches on in-channel sediment quality

AU - Janes, Victoria

AU - Grabowski, Robert

AU - Mant, Jenny

AU - Allen, Deonie

AU - Morse, Jen

AU - Haynes, Heather

PY - 2017/1

Y1 - 2017/1

N2 - Natural Flood Management (NFM) techniques aim to reduce downstream flooding by storing and slowing the flow of stormwater to river channels. These techniques include a range of measures, including setback stormwater outfalls and the physical restoration of channels and floodplains, to improve the natural functioning of catchments. An additional benefit of NFM measures is the potential reduction in sediment and pollutant delivery to the channel. Urban development releases a variety of heavy metal and nutrient pollutants that enter rivers through stormwater outfalls with adverse effects on the aquatic ecosystem. In this study, the influence of channel modification and quality of the river habitat on the sediment quality surrounding stormwater outfalls was assessed. Sediment samples were taken at several outfalls within the Johnson Creek catchment, Oregon, USA, and analysed for a variety of urban pollutants. The level of river habitat quality and modification at each site were assessed using a semi-quantitative scoring methodology. Significant increases in pollutant levels were observed at outfalls, with a greater and more variable increase at direct compared to setback outfalls. Removal efficiency of certain pollutants was found to be significantly correlated to the level of habitat quality or modification (for Fe, Ba, Sn, Mg, P, K) indicating that more natural reaches had greater potential for pollutant removal. The findings highlight the multiple benefits associated with NFM and river restoration approaches in relation to sediment quality and pollutant content.

AB - Natural Flood Management (NFM) techniques aim to reduce downstream flooding by storing and slowing the flow of stormwater to river channels. These techniques include a range of measures, including setback stormwater outfalls and the physical restoration of channels and floodplains, to improve the natural functioning of catchments. An additional benefit of NFM measures is the potential reduction in sediment and pollutant delivery to the channel. Urban development releases a variety of heavy metal and nutrient pollutants that enter rivers through stormwater outfalls with adverse effects on the aquatic ecosystem. In this study, the influence of channel modification and quality of the river habitat on the sediment quality surrounding stormwater outfalls was assessed. Sediment samples were taken at several outfalls within the Johnson Creek catchment, Oregon, USA, and analysed for a variety of urban pollutants. The level of river habitat quality and modification at each site were assessed using a semi-quantitative scoring methodology. Significant increases in pollutant levels were observed at outfalls, with a greater and more variable increase at direct compared to setback outfalls. Removal efficiency of certain pollutants was found to be significantly correlated to the level of habitat quality or modification (for Fe, Ba, Sn, Mg, P, K) indicating that more natural reaches had greater potential for pollutant removal. The findings highlight the multiple benefits associated with NFM and river restoration approaches in relation to sediment quality and pollutant content.

KW - restoration

KW - outfall

KW - setback outfall

KW - sediment

KW - River Habitat Survey

KW - pollutant

KW - Natural Flood Management

U2 - 10.1002/rra.3068

DO - 10.1002/rra.3068

M3 - Journal article

VL - 33

SP - 89

EP - 101

JO - River Research and Applications

JF - River Research and Applications

SN - 1535-1459

IS - 1

ER -