MARSH DEVELOPMENT AFTER LARGE FLOODS IN AN ALLUVIAL, ARID-LAND RIVER

Citation
Jc. Stromberg et al., MARSH DEVELOPMENT AFTER LARGE FLOODS IN AN ALLUVIAL, ARID-LAND RIVER, Wetlands, 17(2), 1997, pp. 292-300
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
02775212
Volume
17
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
292 - 300
Database
ISI
SICI code
0277-5212(1997)17:2<292:MDALFI>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Large expanses of riverine marsh are rare in the desert Southwest, giv en the dry surface of many floodplain soils. Along the Hassayampa Rive r, riverine marsh underwent a 5-fold increase (from 2% to 9% of the fl oodplain-channel area) after a large winter flood in 1993. Flood water s eroded terraces that had aggraded during frequent, smaller floods, w idened the channel from about 3 to 50 m, and recharged the floodplain aquifer. The net effect of these changes was a lowering of the floodpl ain surface relative to the water table, a variable of critical import ance to riparian plant composition in arid-land rivers. Olney's bulrus h (Scirpus americanus Pers.), southern cattail (Typha domingensis Pers .), jointed rush (Juncus articulatus L.), and other obligate wetland s pecies were abundant in 1993 and 1994 on areas with saturated surface soils or shallow water tables and often were intermixed with seedlings of early-seral tree species, including Fremont cottonwood (Populus fr emontii S. Watson), Goodding willow (Salix gooddingii Ball), and salt cedar (Tamarix chinensis Loureiro and related species). The gain in ri verine marsh and young cottonwood-willow stands occurred at the expens e of mature cottonwood-willow forests and deep-rooted, velvet mesquite (Prosopis velutina Woot.) woodlands, Another large flood in 1995 scou red the channel of most existing vegetation and aggraded the 1993 floo d channel, Early-seral tree species again established in moist soils e xposed by the slowly receding flood waters, However, redevelopment of extensive marsh habitat was precluded by sediment deposition that incr eased the elevation of the floodplain surface relative to the water ta ble. These changes highlight the transitory nature of riverine marsh a nd other vegetation patch types in the dynamic floodplains of alluvial , arid-land rivers and underscore the importance of maintaining: flood flows of varying magnitude to maintain patch type diversity.