Reprint

Integrating Ecohydraulics in River Restoration

Advances in Science and Applications

Edited by
March 2020
248 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-328-6 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-329-3 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Integrating Ecohydraulics in River Restoration: Advances in Science and Applications that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Rivers have been intensively degraded due to increasing anthropogenic impacts from a growing population in a continuously developing world. Accordingly, most rivers suffer from pressures as a result of increasing dam and weir construction, habitat degradation, flow regulation, water pollution/abstraction, and the spread of invasive species. Science-based knowledge regarding solutions to counteract the effects of river degradation, and melding principles of aquatic ecology and engineering hydraulics, is thus urgently needed to guide present and future river restoration actions. This Special Issue gathers a coherent set of studies from different geographic contexts, on fundamental and applied research regarding the integration of ecohydraulics in river restoration, ranging from field studies to laboratory experiments that can be applied to real-world challenges. It contains 13 original papers covering ecohydraulic issues such as river restoration technologies, sustainable hydropower, fish passage designs and operational criteria, and habitat modeling. All papers were reviewed by international experts in ecology, hydraulics, aquatic biology, engineering, geomorphology, and hydrology. The papers herein well represent the wide applicability of ecohydraulics in river restoration and serve as a basis to improve current knowledge and management and to reduce arguments between different interests and opinions.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
fishway; upstream passage; hydraulic models; flow patterns; velocity distribution; turbulent flow; fish passage; culvert hydraulics; native fishes; velocity refuge; substrate size; underwater light; behavioral barriers; brown trout; endemic cyprinids; deterrent effect; potamodromous cyprinid species; low-head ramped weirs; upstream migration; ecohydraulics; instream; restoration; HEC-RAS 2D; LiDAR; cost-effectiveness; fish habitat; sustainable hydropower; sub-daily flow fluctuations; peak-load energy production; pulsed flows; environmental flow; biologically sensitive periods; salmonids; Salmo salar; Salmo trutta; Thymallus thymallus; fishway; downstream migration; fish guidance structure; numerical 3D model; OpenFOAM; dam removal; benthic macroinvertebrates; community composition; community stability; community reorganization; fish passage; fish telemetry; river restoration; ecohydraulics; Ictiobus cyprinellus; Ictalurus punctatus; ecohydraulics; living shoreline; restoration; mangrove; flow-vegetation interaction; recruitment; potamodromous fish; fish ladder; fisheries management; free-flowing rivers; Neotropical; hydropeaking; Iberian cyprinids; flow refuges; hydropower; flow variability; fish physiology; fish behaviour; ecohydraulics; potamodromous fish; migration; lift; hydropower; species management