Large woody debris and land management in California's hardwood-dominated watersheds.

Jeff J Opperman
Author Information
  1. Jeff J Opperman: Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA. jjopperman@ucdavis.edu

Abstract

Although large woody debris (LWD) has been studied extensively in conifer-dominated watersheds, relatively little is known about LWD in hardwood-dominated watersheds. Field surveys of 32 hardwood-dominated stream reaches in northern coastal California revealed that levels of LWD varied with land ownership and that living trees strongly influenced debris jam formation. Almost half of the channel-spanning debris jams, which stored the most wood and were most likely to form a pool, were formed behind a key piece that was still living. These living key pieces might provide greater longevity and stability than would otherwise be expected from hardwood LWD. Compared to streams on private land, streams on public land had significantly greater LWD loading and debris-jam frequency. Land management practices that remove wood from streams might be contributing to the degradation of salmonid habitat in California's hardwood-dominated watersheds.

References

Environ Manage. 2001 Nov;28(5):687-98 [PMID: 11568848]
Environ Manage. 2004 Mar;33(3):376-84 [PMID: 15031768]

MeSH Term

Animals
California
Conservation of Natural Resources
Environment Design
Population Dynamics
Rivers
Salmonidae
Water Supply
Wood