| Literature DB >> 30231079 |
Kirstie A Fryirs1, Gary J Brierley2.
Abstract
Meaningful iteration between place-based knowledge of rivers and generalised, theoretically-framed understandings is a significant challenge in river science and management. How can we communicate knowledge of the inherent complexity of river systems in light of managerial quests for simple, easy-to-apply frameworks that can be used by a wide range of practitioners, such that we can meaningfully transfer experiences in river science and management from one situation to another? Identification, definition, classification and naming are vital parts of this process. In a sense, a name is like a 'brand', for which a consistency of product is expected. The River Styles Framework is a flexible, open-ended approach to river science and management. The Framework applies a set of hierarchical principles to differentiate reaches, interpret their process-based behaviour and examine interactions between patterns of reaches at the catchment scale. Here we outline an evolution and tightening of the Framework to better communicate how to identify and name types of river at the reach scale. Like the River Styles Framework itself, the naming convention applies hierarchical procedures, starting at the valley setting scale, and incorporating analyses of river planform, channel and floodplain landforms (geomorphic units) and bed material texture. Using a series of examples from around the world, we show how this naming convention can be applied to name river reaches and can be adapted to particular purposes in a consistent, readily communicable manner. We outline various challenges that are faced in managing the use of such a naming convention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30231079 PMCID: PMC6145511 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 4River Styles procedural tree for identifying different river types across the spectrum of river diversity.
The approach identifies types of river based on a mix of measures including valley setting, channel planform, geomorphic units and bed material texture. Modified from [29] and reproduced under a CC BY license, with permission from Wiley, original copyright 2005.
Fig 8Worked examples of full and abbreviated names for a range of river types across the spectrum of river diversity.
Examples are shown for confined, partly confined and laterally unconfined river types. Basemaps produced with ArcGIS software by Esri. Sources: Esri, DigitalGlobe, GeoEye, Earthstar Geographics, CNES/Airbus DS, USDA, USGS, AeroGRID, IGN, and the GIS User Community.
Some abbreviations for describing types of margn control, river planform, geomorphic units and bed material texture as part of the naming convention.
Note: list of geomorphic units taken from [53], [29] and [19].
| TYPES OF MARGIN CONTROL OR CONSTRAINTS | PLANFORM TYPES | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bedrock | Br | Headwater | Hw |
| Terrace | Tr | Gorge | Gge |
| Fan | Fn | Canyon | Cyn |
| Dune | Dn | Braided | Braid |
| Meandering | Meand | ||
| Stopbank | SBk | Wandering | Wan |
| Constructed levee | CoLv | Low sinuosity | LSin |
| Embankment | EBk | Anastomosing | Anast |
| Bank revetment | BkRe | Anabranching | Anbr |
| Railroad | RaRd | Chain of ponds | CoP |
| Road | Rd | Valley fill | VFi |
| Pipe | Pip | Swamp | Swp |
| Concrete | Crt | Floodout | Fout |
| Earth | Ea | Canal | Cnl |
| I | |||
| Bedrock step (waterfall) | BrSt | Alluvial riffle | ARi |
| Step-pool | SPo | Alluvial pool | APo |
| Cascade | Cc | Longitudinal bar (medial bar) | LoBa |
| Rapid | Rp | Transverse bar (linguoid bar) | TBa |
| Run (glide, plane-bed) | Ru | Diagonal bar (diamond bar) | DBa |
| Forced riffle | FoRi | Expansion bar | EBa |
| Forced pool | FoPo | Island | Isl |
| Plunge pool | PPo | Boulder mound | BMd |
| Pot hole | PHo | Bedrock core bar | BrCBa |
| Sand sheet | SSh | ||
| Lateral bar (alternate or side bar) | LaBa | Gravel sheet | GSh |
| Scroll bar | ScBa | Forced mid-channel bar (pendant bar, wake bar, lee bar) | FMcBa |
| Point bar | PtBa | Compound mid-channel bar | CMcBa |
| Tributary confluence bar (channel junction bar, eddy bar) | TCBa | Alluvial riffle | ARi |
| Ridge | Ri | Alluvial pool | APo |
| Chute channel | CCh | Longitudinal bar (medial bar) | LoBa |
| Ramp (chute channel fill) | Rp | ||
| Bench | Be | Sculpted lateral bar | SLaBa |
| Point bench | PtBe | Sculpted longitudinal bar | SLoBa |
| Ledge | Le | Sculpted point bar | SPtBa |
| Point ledge | PtLe | Sculpted run | SRu |
| Boulder berm | BBrm | Sculpted pool | SPo |
| Concave bank bench | CCBe | ||
| Compound bank-attached bar | CBABa | ||
| Forced bank-attached bar | FBABa | ||
| Occasional floodplain | OccFp | Palaeochannel (prior channel, abandoned, ancestral channel) | FpPc |
| Discontinuous floodplain | DcFp | Ridge | FpRi |
| Floodplain (alluvial flat) | Fp | Swale | FpSw |
| Levee | Lv | Valley fill (swamp, swampy meadow) | Vfi |
| Crevasse splay | CSp | Meander cutoff (neck cutoff, billabong) | FpMCu |
| Floodchannel (back channel) | FCh | Ox bow | FpOx |
| Flood runner | FRu | Chute cut-off | FpChCu |
| Backswamp (distal floodplain, floodplain wetland, floodplain lake) | BSw | Floodplain channel anabranch (secondary or flood channel) | FpCab |
| Floodplain sand sheet | FpSs | ||
| Bedrock | Br | Gravel | G |
| Boulder | B | Sand | S |
| Cobble | C | Fine grained | F |
Full and abbreviated names for rivers in Figs 1–3.
For examples of abbreviations to use in names, see Table 1.
| Figure | Full (verbose) name | Abbreviated name |
|---|---|---|
| Confined, bedrock margin-controlled, canyon, gravel bed | C_BrMC_Cyn_Gbed | |
| Partly confined, bedrock margin controlled, discontinuous floodplain, gravel bed | PC_BrMC_DcFp_Gbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, meandering, sand bed | LU_C_Meand_Sbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, meandering, fine grained bed | LU_C_Meand_Fbed | |
| Partly confined, planform-controlled, braided, terrace constrained, discontinuous floodplain, gravel bed | PC_PC_Braid_TrCS_DcFp_Gbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, braided, gravel bed | LU_C_Braid_Gbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, anastomosing, fine grained bed | LU_C_Anast_Fbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, anabranching, fine grained bed | LU_C_Anbr_Fbed | |
| Laterally unconfined, continuous channel, wandering, gravel bed | LU_C_Wan_Gbed | |
| Partly-confined, bedrock margin controlled, anastomosing, bedrock bed | PC_BrMC_Anast_Brbed |