| Literature DB >> 26982076 |
Alan Kasprak1, Nate Hough-Snee1,2, Tim Beechie3, Nicolaas Bouwes4, Gary Brierley5, Reid Camp1,4, Kirstie Fryirs6, Hiroo Imaki7, Martha Jensen1,2, Gary O'Brien1, David Rosgen8, Joseph Wheaton1,2.
Abstract
Stream classification provides a means to understand the diversity and distribution of channels and floodplains that occur across a landscape while identifying links between geomorphic form and process. Accordingly, stream classification is frequently employed as a watershed planning, management, and restoration tool. At the same time, there has been intense debate and criticism of particular frameworks, on the grounds that these frameworks classify stream reaches based largely on their physical form, rather than direct measurements of their component hydrogeomorphic processes. Despite this debate surrounding stream classifications, and their ongoing use in watershed management, direct comparisons of channel classification frameworks are rare. Here we implement four stream classification frameworks and explore the degree to which each make inferences about hydrogeomorphic process from channel form within the Middle Fork John Day Basin, a watershed of high conservation interest within the Columbia River Basin, U.S.A. We compare the results of the River Styles Framework, Natural Channel Classification, Rosgen Classification System, and a channel form-based statistical classification at 33 field-monitored sites. We found that the four frameworks consistently classified reach types into similar groups based on each reach or segment's dominant hydrogeomorphic elements. Where classified channel types diverged, differences could be attributed to the (a) spatial scale of input data used, (b) the requisite metrics and their order in completing a framework's decision tree and/or, (c) whether the framework attempts to classify current or historic channel form. Divergence in framework agreement was also observed at reaches where channel planform was decoupled from valley setting. Overall, the relative agreement between frameworks indicates that criticism of individual classifications for their use of form in grouping stream channels may be overstated. These form-based criticisms may also ignore the geomorphic tenet that channel form reflects formative hydrogeomorphic processes across a given landscape.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26982076 PMCID: PMC4794181 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summaries of the four classification frameworks applied to streams of the Middle Fork John Day River Basin: River Styles, Natural Channel Classification, Rosgen Classification System, and statistical classification.
| Classification Framework (abbreviation) | Description | Examples | Data requirements | Classified output | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| River Styles Framework (RSF) | A hierarchical, multi-scale classification scheme for describing river character and behavior. River Styles can be used to understand river condition, recovery potential and prioritize management. | Use in river management practice across NSW, Australia [ | Field, remote-sensing and other GIS data on geology, hydrology, and stream geomorphic setting to identify broad-scale to local controls on river character and behavior. | Continuous stream network (NHD+) | [ |
| Columbia Basin Natural Channel Classification (NCC) | NCC is a model-based stream classification using a machine-learning (support vector machine) algorithm to group reaches based on their historic, undisturbed planform. Divides reaches into groups based on channel width before sub-dividing on reach-level remote sensing data. | A historic planform map and dataset for the Columbia River Basin [ | Remotely-sensed channel slope, discharge, valley confinement, sediment supply, and sediment size are used as predictors of channel planform in a modeling framework. | Continuous, pre-disturbance stream network (NHD) | [ |
| Rosgen Classification System (RCS) | RCS is a stream-reach taxonomy based on field-collected empirical data that classifies geomorphic stream features to identify stream types by numerically bounded physical metrics. This is arguably the most commonly used stream classification system in North America and the world. | RCS can be employed to successfully restore a reach to a reference condition, provided that the reference reach is stable [ | Valley morphology for broad context, and reach-scale monitoring data to calculate basic dimensionless metrics linking form to physical processes. | Individual reaches within a stream network (field-monitored reaches) | [ |
| Statistical Classification (SC) | Statistical classification refers to any classification methods used to differentiate or group stream reaches, watersheds, etc. based on multiple physical, chemical, and/or biological attributes. Attributes are often selected for their role in driving or responding to dominant processes within a catchment. | Comparing restored, forested, and urban channels [ | Requires reach-scale monitoring data for “bottom-up” classifications. Requires remote sensing and GIS data to classify reaches from the “top-down” or correlate classified reaches to larger-scale environmental or physical processes. | Individual reaches within a stream network (field-monitored reaches). Can be applied to networks if inputs are available for stream segments or networks. | [ |
Fig 1Map of the Middle Fork John Day Basin, Oregon, USA.
The 33 Columbia Habitat Monitoring Program (CHaMP) reaches monitored between 2012–2013 are shown in circles. The National Landcover Dataset is presented as the base map to illustrate biophysical gradients across the watershed. Four photos illustrate the diversity of landscapes encountered across the basin.
Form-based channel metrics included in classification analyses.
| Metric of channel form | Relationship to channel processes | RSF | NCC | RCS | Clustering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valley confinement | Ability for lateral adjustment [ | ||||
| Presence or absence of channels | Magnitude/frequency of flow [ | ||||
| Number of channels | Accommodation space for flow [ | ||||
| Distribution of floodplains | Accommodation space for flow [ | ||||
| Gradient or channel slope | Transport competence via stream power [ | ||||
| Sinuosity | Competence via slope/stream power [ | ||||
| Lateral channel stability | Ability for lateral adjustment [ | ||||
| Unit stream power | Transport competence [ | ||||
| Site discharge | Transport competence via stream power [ | ||||
| Bankfull width | Transport competence via unit stream power [ | ||||
| Wetted width | Transport competence via stream power [ | ||||
| Bankfull depth | Transport competence [ | ||||
| Width: depth ratio | Transport Competence [ | ||||
| Entrenchment ratio | Accommodation space for flow [ | ||||
| Bed material (categorical) | Transport competence [ | ||||
| Transport competence [ | |||||
| Geomorphic units (channel and floodplain) | Transport competence [ |
Note that inclusion of metrics in each classification framework reflects only the stages that were completed in this research, and that ‘processes’ only include geomorphic dynamics, and exclude ecological processes.
Fig 2Statistical clustering of reaches using principal components analysis (PCA) based on gradient, D, D, D, bankfull width, bankfull width:depth ratio, and integrated wetted width (i.e. channel width at time of sampling), classified into four discrete groups using partitioning around medoids.
Vectors of stream channel variables are plotted based on the strength of their correlation to the PCA (e.g. longer vectors are more strongly correlated to the channel form variable PCA). The first and second principal components explained 85.6% and 10.9% of the variability in the reach attribute data within the PCA. Point colors represent which cluster each reach was classified into, and representative photographs provide examples of characteristic reach morphology for each cluster.
Analogous reach types between NCC, RSF, RCS, and statistical clustering based on common geomorphic attributes.
Those reach types with good (G) or moderate (M) agreement are included, while those with poor agreement are not shown here, but are noted in Table 4.
| NCC reach type | RSF reach type | RCS reach type | Statistical cluster |
|---|---|---|---|
| Island Braided | Low Sinuosity Planform Controlled Anabranching (G); Intact Valley Fill (M); Alluvial Fan (M) | D (G) | 2: Wide, Sinuous (M) |
| Meandering | Meandering Gravel Bed (G); Meandering Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain (G); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Gravel Bed (M); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Disc. Floodplain (M); Bedrock-Controlled Elongate Discontinuous Floodplain (M); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Gravel Bed (M) | C (G), E (G), G (M), F (M) | 4: Wide, Sinuous (G); 1: Narrow, Sinuous (M); 2: Wide, Low-Gradient (M) |
| Straight | Boulder Bed (G); Meandering Planform-Controlled Disc. Floodplain (G); Confined Valley—Floodplain Pockets (G); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Partly Confined Disc. Floodplain (G); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Gravel Bed (G); Alluvial Fan (M); Bedrock-Controlled Elongate Discontinuous Floodplain (M) | A (G); B (G); G (M) | 2: Wide, Low-Gradient (G); 3: Steep, Narrow (G) |
| Confined | Entrenched Bedrock Canyon (G); Confined Valley—Floodplain Pockets (G); Step Cascade (G); Steep Perennial Headwater (M); Steep Ephemeral Hillslope (M) | A (G); F (G); G (G); B (M) | 1: Narrow, Sinuous (G); 3: Steep, Narrow (G); 2: Wide, Low Gradient (M) |
| Cascade | Step Cascade (G); Boulder Bed (G); Floodplain Pockets (M); Steep Perennial Headwater (M); Steep Ephemeral Hillslope (M) | B (G); F (G); G (G); A (M) | 3: Steep, Narrow (G) 1: Narrow, Sinuous (M) |
| Pool Riffle | Meandering Gravel Bed (G); Meandering Planform Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain (G); Confined Valley—Floodplain Pockets (G); Bedrock-Controlled Elongate Discontinuous Floodplain (G); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform Controlled Disc. Floodplain (M); Meandering Partly-Confined Floodplain (M) | C (G); F (G); G (G); E (G); B (M) | 1: Narrow, Sinuous (G); 2: Wide, Low Gradient (G); 4: Wide, Sinuous (M) |
| Step Pool | Boulder Bed (G); Step Cascade (G); Steep Perennial Headwater (G); Steep Ephemeral Hillslope (G); Confined Valley—Floodplain Pockets (M) | B (G); F (G); G (G); A (M) | 3: Steep, Narrow (G); 1: Narrow, Sinuous (M) |
| Plane Bed | Entrenched Bedrock Canyon (G); Confined Valley—Floodplain Pockets (G); Bedrock Controlled Elongate Discontinuous Floodplain (G); Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform Controlled Disc. Floodplain (G); Meandering Planform Controlled Floodplain (M); Boulder Bed (M); Steep Perennial Headwater (M); Steep Ephemeral Hillslope (M) | A (G); B (G); C (G); F (G); G (G) | 3: Steep, Narrow (G); 1: Narrow, Sinuous (M); 4: Wide, Sinuous (M) |
Classification results for the four methods compared here.
| Classification framework | Confinement | Reach type | Total stream length (km) | % Total length | # CHaMP reaches | % CHaMP reaches |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RSF | Confined | Boulder bed | 1230.7 | 30.2 | 1 | 3.0 |
| RSF | Confined | Entrenched bedrock canyon | 121.1 | 3.0 | 2 | 6.1 |
| RSF | Confined | Occasional floodplain pockets | 242.5 | 6.0 | 5 | 15.2 |
| RSF | Confined | Step cascade | 37.9 | 0.9 | 0 | 0 |
| RSF | Confined | Steep ephemeral hillslope | 1542.3 | 37.9 | 0 | 0 |
| RSF | Confined | Steep perennial headwater | 319.4 | 7.8 | 0 | 0 |
| RSF | Partly confined | Meandering planform controlled discontinuous floodplain | 34.5 | 0.8 | 4 | 12.1 |
| RSF | Partly confined | Low sinuosity planform controlled anabranching | 18.2 | 0.5 | 2 | 6.1 |
| RSF | Partly confined | Low-moderate sinuosity planform-controlled discontinuous floodplain | 170.2 | 4.2 | 11 | 33.3 |
| RSF | Partly confined | Bedrock controlled elongate discontinuous floodplain | 113.8 | 2.8 | 4 | 12.1 |
| RSF | Laterally unconfined | Low-moderate sinuosity gravel bed | 31.9 | 0.8 | 1 | 3.0 |
| RSF | Laterally unconfined | Alluvial fan | 49.3 | 1.2 | 1 | 3.0 |
| RSF | Laterally unconfined | Meandering gravel bed | 62.9 | 1.5 | 2 | 6.1 |
| RSF | Laterally unconfined | Intact valley fill | 99.4 | 2.4 | 0 | 0 |
| NCC | Bankfull width > 8 m | Straight | 132.9 | 7.8 | 8 | 24.2 |
| NCC | Bankfull width > 8 m | Meandering | 34.7 | 2.0 | 3 | 9.1 |
| NCC | Bankfull width > 8 m | Island-braided | 42.8 | 2.5 | 2 | 6.1 |
| NCC | Bankfull width > 8 m | Confined | 76.5 | 4.5 | 3 | 9.1 |
| NCC | Bankfull width < 8 m | Pool riffle | 129.9 | 7.7 | 5 | 15.2 |
| NCC | Bankfull width < 8 m | Plane bed | 431.5 | 25.4 | 8 | 24.2 |
| NCC | Bankfull width < 8 m | Step pool | 595.3 | 35.1 | 4 | 12.1 |
| NCC | Bankfull width < 8 m | Cascade | 253.7 | 14.9 | 0 | 0 |
| RCS | Entrenched | A4 | 4 | 12.1 | ||
| RCS | Entrenched | F3 | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| RCS | Entrenched | G4c | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| RCS | Moderately entrenched | B3c | 2 | 6.1 | ||
| RCS | Moderately entrenched | B4 | 8 | 24.2 | ||
| RCS | Moderately entrenched | B4a | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| RCS | Moderately entrenched | B4c | 5 | 15.2 | ||
| RCS | Slightly Entrenched | C3b | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| RCS | Slightly Entrenched | C4b | 8 | 24.2 | ||
| RCS | Slightly Entrenched | E3 | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| RCS | Slightly Entrenched | E4 | 1 | 3.0 | ||
| Clustering | Narrow, sinuous (1) | 7 | 21.2 | |||
| Clustering | Wide, low-gradient (2) | 5 | 15.2 | |||
| Clustering | High-gradient, narrow (3) | 16 | 48.5 | |||
| Clustering | Wide, sinuous (4) | 5 | 15.2 |
River Styles and Columbia Basin Natural Channel Classification are summarized across the entire network and at CHaMP sites, while the Rosgen Classification System and clustering classifications are summarized only for reaches with CHaMP channel data.
Fig 3Results of the four classifications.
(A) River Styles, (B) Natural Channel Classes, (C) Rosgen Classification System, and (D) statistical classification with clustering (partitioning around medoids) mapped across the Middle Fork John Day Basin. River Styles and Natural Channel Classes are mapped across the entire stream network, while Rosgen Classification System and statistical classification results are presented only for CHaMP reaches. Full River Style and Natural Channel Class results for CHaMP reaches are presented in Table 4.
Fig 4Classification results across network and sites.
Percent of total network channel length and percent of CHaMP sites classified into reach types using each classification framework (A-D).
Classification results and agreement for each CHaMP site across the four classification frameworks.
| CHaMP Site ID | Stream name | UTM Easting | UTM Northing | River Style Valley Confinement | River Styles | Natural Channel Classes | Rosgen Class. System | Statistical Clustering | Agreement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBW05583-250506 | Lunch Creek | 377638 | 4930916 | CV | Boulder Bed | Step Pool | A4 | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Mod; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-004682 | Middle Fork John Day River | 333505 | 4971313 | CV | Entrenched Bedrock Canyon | Island Braided | B4c | Wide, low-gradient | RS: Poor; RCS: Poor; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-021066 | Middle Fork John Day River | 337657 | 4968709 | CV | Entrenched Bedrock Canyon | Confined | F3 | Wide, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Mod. |
| CBW05583-144114 | Vinegar Creek | 380932 | 4942422 | CV | Floodplain Pockets | Step Pool | A4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Mod.; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-223986 | Bridge Creek | 379613 | 4935524 | CV | Floodplain Pockets | Plane Bed | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-456690 | Butte Creek | 369488 | 4942756 | CV | Floodplain Pockets | Plane Bed | A4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| OJD03458-000017 | West Fork Lick Creek | 357991 | 4940711 | CV | Floodplain Pockets | Step Pool | B4a | Steep, narrow | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-051954 | Dry Fork Clear Creek | 383698 | 4934662 | CV | Floodplain Pockets | Straight | E3 | Wide, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Poor; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-189938 | Granite Boulder Creek | 369068 | 4945617 | LUV | Alluvial Fan | Straight | B4 | Wide, low-gradient | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-449266 | Middle Fork John Day River | 376782 | 4941104 | LUV | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Gravel Bed | Meandering | C4b | Steep, narrow | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-003826 | Summit Creek | 386503 | 4937885 | LUV | Meandering Gravel Bed | Pool Riffle | G4c | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-358130 | Squaw Creek | 388721 | 4936107 | LUV | Meandering Gravel Bed | Pool Riffle | B4c | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-289522 | Middle Fork John Day River | 378688 | 4939623 | PC | Bedrock-controlled Elongate Discont. Floodplain | Island-Braided | C4b | Steep, narrow | RS: Poor; RCS: Poor; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-275954 | Middle Fork John Day River | 364436 | 4947549 | PC | Bedrock-controlled Elongate Discont. Floodplain | Straight | B3c | Wide, low-gradient | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-290034 | Middle Fork John Day River | 370912 | 4944299 | PC | Bedrock-controlled Elongate Discont. Floodplain | Straight | B3c | Wide, low-gradient | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-415218 | Middle Fork John Day River | 361529 | 4948510 | PC | Bedrock-controlled Elongate Discont. Floodplain | Confined | C3b | Wide, low-gradient | RS: Poor; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Mod. |
| CBW05583-030730 | Camp Creek | 352247 | 4942752 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Straight | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-330226 | Camp Creek | 357015 | 4947826 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Straight | B4c | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-118770 | North Fork Bridge Creek | 375925 | 4933066 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Step Pool | A4 | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Poor; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Mod. |
| CBW05583-299658 | Clear Creek | 382042 | 4930368 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | B4c | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Mod. |
| CBW05583-438922 | Dry Fork Clear Creek | 384597 | 4933274 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Straight | C4b | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Poor; RCS: Poor; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-234122 | Clear Creek | 382238 | 4929332 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-381682 | Vinegar Creek | 380718 | 4944390 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | C4b | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-383986 | Camp Creek | 353774 | 4936398 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | C4b | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-404210 | Vinegar Creek | 379442 | 4940614 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-477938 | Clear Creek | 381713 | 4935379 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Straight | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Poor; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| OJD03458-000536 | Vinegar Creek | 378654 | 4940187 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Plane Bed | C4b | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-325362 | Summit Creek | 390544 | 4937077 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Pool Riffle | C4b | Wide, sinuous | RS: Mod.; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| OJD03458-000031 | Camp Creek | 351579 | 4940332 | PC | Low-Moderate Sinuosity Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Confined | B4 | Wide, sinuous | RS: Poor; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-144394 | Slide Creek | 344959 | 4955342 | PC | Meandering Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Pool Riffle | E4 | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Good |
| CBW05583-429810 | Summit Creek | 387760 | 4937802 | PC | Meandering Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Meandering | C4b | Narrow, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Good; Cluster: Mod. |
| CBW05583-013322 | Slide Creek | 345607 | 4957140 | PC | Meandering Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Pool Riffle | B4 | Steep, narrow | RS: Good; RCS: Mod.; Cluster: Poor |
| CBW05583-298738 | Middle Fork John Day River | 385006 | 4938373 | PC | Meandering Planform-Controlled Discontinuous Floodplain | Meandering | B4c | Wide, sinuous | RS: Good; RCS: Poor; Cluster: Good |
Fig 5Illustrative example reaches describing agreement between classification outputs.
Reaches at which the four classifications had poor agreement, moderate agreement, and good agreement in the observed channel planform.
Fig 6Dendrogram of clustered reaches based on their classification outputs from each of the four frameworks.
Reaches with a distance of zero that occur on adjacent nodes of the same length are identical. For example, reaches CBW05583-381682 and CBW05583-383986 are identical in how they were classified by all four frameworks. Reaches were clustered using an average linkage clustering algorithm and Gower’s distance matrix.
Fig 7Principal coordinates analysis ordination showing reaches’ relative similarity based on the outputs of the four classification frameworks.
Each reach is plotted within each classification output for ease of interpretation. Reaches were grouped within the ordination space using Gower’s distance. Reaches that are more similar to one another are closer together in the ordination space. R2 values correspond to the fit of a given classification framework’s outputs to the ordination of all classification outputs.