Case study:River Colne Riparian Tree Planting: Difference between revisions
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|Status=Complete | |Status=Complete | ||
|Country=England | |Country=England | ||
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|Main contact surname=Butcher | |Main contact surname=Butcher | ||
|Multi-site=No | |Multi-site=No | ||
|Project summary=The River Colne is not meeting its WFD objectives for aquatic plants, and the fish status has recently deteriorated from high to good. Riparian shade mapping from the Keeping Rivers Cool project and walk over surveys showed that the rive would benefit from increased shade at a number of locations. Working with landowners, Essex & Suffolk River Trust identified a number of sites where tree planting could be undertaken, and planted trees at one suitable site. | |||
|Monitoring surveys and results=Riparian trees provide shade, which not only keeps the water cooler, but also helps control excessive weed and algal growth. | |||
Cooler water not only contains more oxygen, but many fish and invertebrates are sensitive to increasing temperature. This is likely to be exacerbated as temperatures increase due to climate change. In the future the tree roots and woody debris from fallen branches and tree trunks will provide important in-channel habitat and flow diversity, providing refuge for fish and invertebrates from both predators and high flows. Trees also help stabilise the banks, reducing erosion as well as improving infiltration and intercepting pollution and sediment. Reduced sediment transfer prevents the smothering of important gravel habitat, and can reduce pesticide and nutrient run off. Tree planting therefore not only provides important habitat but improves water quality and can reduce the need for expensive river maintenance. | |||
|Lessons learn=Close liaison with permitting and enforcement colleagues is essential to establish suitable restoration sites, and ensure that flood risk is not increased. | |||
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{{Case study subcatchment}} | {{Case study subcatchment}} | ||
{{Site}} | {{Site | ||
{{Project background}} | |WFD water body code=GB105037041330 | ||
|Heavily modified water body=No | |||
|Protected species present=No | |||
|Invasive species present=No | |||
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{{Project background | |||
|Investigation and design cost category=5000 - 10000 k€ | |||
|Invst and design cost=7000 | |||
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{{Motivations}} | {{Motivations}} | ||
{{Measures}} | {{Measures}} |
Latest revision as of 14:04, 1 August 2016
This case study is pending approval by a RiverWiki administrator.
Project overview
Status | Complete |
---|---|
Project web site | |
Themes | |
Country | England |
Main contact forename | Matt |
Main contact surname | Butcher |
Main contact user ID | |
Contact organisation | |
Contact organisation web site | |
Partner organisations | |
Parent multi-site project | |
This is a parent project encompassing the following projects |
No |
Project summary
The River Colne is not meeting its WFD objectives for aquatic plants, and the fish status has recently deteriorated from high to good. Riparian shade mapping from the Keeping Rivers Cool project and walk over surveys showed that the rive would benefit from increased shade at a number of locations. Working with landowners, Essex & Suffolk River Trust identified a number of sites where tree planting could be undertaken, and planted trees at one suitable site.
Monitoring surveys and results
Riparian trees provide shade, which not only keeps the water cooler, but also helps control excessive weed and algal growth.
Cooler water not only contains more oxygen, but many fish and invertebrates are sensitive to increasing temperature. This is likely to be exacerbated as temperatures increase due to climate change. In the future the tree roots and woody debris from fallen branches and tree trunks will provide important in-channel habitat and flow diversity, providing refuge for fish and invertebrates from both predators and high flows. Trees also help stabilise the banks, reducing erosion as well as improving infiltration and intercepting pollution and sediment. Reduced sediment transfer prevents the smothering of important gravel habitat, and can reduce pesticide and nutrient run off. Tree planting therefore not only provides important habitat but improves water quality and can reduce the need for expensive river maintenance.
Lessons learnt
Close liaison with permitting and enforcement colleagues is essential to establish suitable restoration sites, and ensure that flood risk is not increased.
Image gallery
Catchment and subcatchment
Site
Project background
Cost for project phases
Reasons for river restoration
Measures
MonitoringHydromorphological quality elements
Biological quality elements
Physico-chemical quality elements
Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic
Monitoring documents
Additional documents and videos
Additional links and references
Supplementary InformationEdit Supplementary Information
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