Difference between revisions of "GCDAMP- Vegetation Page"
From Glen Canyon Dam AMP
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== Under Construction == | == Under Construction == | ||
+ | *To restore riparian vegetation communities and associated values, managers desire a better understanding of the linkages between flow variables and vegetation response. | ||
+ | ---- | ||
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'''HFE-Workshop_USBR-SLC_100617''' | '''HFE-Workshop_USBR-SLC_100617''' | ||
*Significant increase in riparian vegetation; riperian vegetation. Big floods in 1983, and has increased since then. | *Significant increase in riparian vegetation; riperian vegetation. Big floods in 1983, and has increased since then. |
Latest revision as of 14:26, 28 May 2015
Under Construction
- To restore riparian vegetation communities and associated values, managers desire a better understanding of the linkages between flow variables and vegetation response.
HFE-Workshop_USBR-SLC_100617
- Significant increase in riparian vegetation; riperian vegetation. Big floods in 1983, and has increased since then.
- 1980 infrared photos show that riparian vegetatin had taken up much of the flood plain down to power plant capacity flow levels.
- 2013 USGS Report to AMWG--
- More riparian vegetation exists than in previous 5 decades at the lowest elevation zones (<45k ft3/s)
- Riperian woody vegetation expanded shoreward
- HFEs of present magnitude/ duration do not appear to affect the longer term trend of expansion
- Vegetation change is significantly related to river hydrology at lower elevation zones (<45k ft3/s)and regional climate at higher elevations (>97k ft3/s)
- Remote sensing datasets allow both large-scale change detection and local-scale analysis to quantify