May 1, 2007
Journal Article

Bedform morphology of salmon spawning areas in a large gravel-bed river

Abstract

While the importance of river channel morphology to salmon spawning habitat is increasingly recognized, quantitative measures of the relationships between channel morphology and habitat use are lacking. Such quantitative measures are necessary as management and regulatory agencies within the Pacific Northwestern region of the USA, and elsewhere, seek to quantify potential spawning habitat and develop recovery goals for declining salmon populations. The objective of this study was to determine if fall Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) spawning areas in the Snake River, Idaho, USA, were correlated with specific bed form types at the pool-riffle scale. A bed form differencing technique was used to objectively quantify the longitudinal riverbed profile into four distinct pool-riffle units that were independent of discharge. The vertical location of thalweg points within these units was quantified with a riffle proximity index. Chinook salmon spawning areas were mapped and correlated with the pool-riffle units through the use of cross-tabulation tables. The results indicate that 84% of fall Chinook salmon spawning areas were correlated with riffles (Chi-square=152.1, df=3, p

Revised: May 11, 2011 | Published: May 1, 2007

Citation

Hanrahan T.P. 2007. Bedform morphology of salmon spawning areas in a large gravel-bed river. Geomorphology 86, no. 3-4:529-536. PNWD-SA-7419. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2006.09.017