Help:Dictionary
Term | Definition |
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Accretion | Process by which particles carried by the flow of water or by the wind are deposited and accumulate (opposite is erosion). |
Adaptive management | An approach to managing systems with inherent uncertainties that involves learning from the system’s responses to intervention, then using that learning to improve future management |
Anastomosis | This is the reconnection of two streams that previously branched out. |
Anastomosing | See page: Anastomosing |
Angiosperms | Flowering plants, a Biological Quality Element (BQE) under the Water Framework Directive |
Average channel gradient category | Channel gradient is the grade measured by the ratio of drop in elevation of a stream per unit horizontal distance |
Average channel gradient | Channel gradient is the grade measured by the ratio of drop in elevation of a stream per unit horizontal distance |
Asset | In flood defence, any man-made or natural feature – such as a raised defence, retaining structure, channel, pumping station or culvert – that performs a flood defence or land drainage function |
Attenuation | The reduction in the peak discharge of a flood which may occur as the flood passes downriver, including the effects of any flood storage ponds and reservoirs |
Backwater | A ‘dead-end’ channel, which is typically a remnant of a previous route of a meandering watercourse |
Bagwork | A form of revetment constructed from dry-filled bags of a weak sand-cement mix. The bags are either hessian or plastic and are part-filled with the sand-cement mix. They are then placed on the soil surface to form a revetment, with staggered joints, and tamped into place. The sand-cement mix hardens over time and the bag material ages to give a more natural appearance. Can also be used to form low retaining walls. |
Bank Stability | The ability of a river bank to counteract erosion or gravity forces |
Bankfull | The bankfull stage is associated with the flow that just fills the channel to the top of its banks and at a point where the water begins to overflow onto a floodplain. |
Bed | The area between the banks of a river ordinarily covered by water |
Benthic | Relating to the bed of a water body or to the organisms that live there. |
Berm | A low, often wet, ledge or terrace at the edge of the stream that constricts the flow and allows a vegetated wetland margin to develop. |
Biodiversity | All the species living in a particular area |
Biological | Relating to life or living organisms |
Biota | The total collection of organisms of a geographic region or a time period. |
Bund | An embankment, typically earth |
Catchment | The land (and its area) which drains (normally naturally) to a given point on a river, drainage system or other body of water |
Coir | a natural fibre extracted from the husk of coconuts. It can be formed into mattresses and rolls for use in river bank erosion control and vegetation establishment. |
Communities | An assemblage of two or more populations of different species occupying the same geographical area. |
Conveyance | For a channel, function of the flow area, shape and roughness of a channel, which can be used as a constant in a formula relating discharge capacity to channel gradient |
Cost Effectiveness Analysis | A technique which seeks to identify the least cost option for meeting a particular objective. It enables prioritisation between options, but ultimately does not assess whether an option is economically worthwhile (cost benefit analysis would be employed to do this) |
Coppicing | Traditional management of trees and shrubs for wood production by cutting stems close to the base and removing regrowth periodically. |
Culvert | A closed conduit carrying a watercourse beneath an obstruction such as a road, railway or canal. The term ‘closed’ implies that a culvert has a hard soffit and invert. The term ‘conduit’ implies the conveyance of water some or all of the time, thereby excluding tunnels and underpasses for vehicles, pedestrians and animals. |
Dredging | Underwater excavation, usually including removal of the excavated material
{{Definition|Term=Dominant geology|Definition=Classifies the material that predominates in the project area: Calcarous, Organic, Siliceous |
Ecoregion | This is a geographically and ecologically large unit of land containing characteristic, geographically distinct assemblages of natural communities, species and environmental conditions.
Select from: Iceland; Tundra; Borealic uplands; Fenno-Scandian Shield; Taiga; Great Britain; Ireland and Northern Ireland; Central Plains; Baltic Province; Eastern Plains; Central Highlands; Western Plains; Western Highlands; Alps; Hungarian Lowlands; Carpathians; Pontic Province; Caspic Depression; Pyrenees; The Caucasus; Eastern Balkan; Hellenic Western Balkan; Dinaric Western Balkan; Italy and Corsica; Ibero-Macaronesian |
Embankment | A raised structure (as of earth or gravel) used especially to hold back water. |
Erosion | Process by which particles are removed by the action of wind, flowing water or waves (opposite is accretion) |
Estuary | An estuary is a partly enclosed coastal body of brackish water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea. |
Faggot, fascine | A bundle of brushwood tied together into a cylindrical shape. Used to provide temporary erosion protection to a channel bank; to form flow deflectors; and to promote the deposition of sediment in marginal areas. |
Fish pass | Structure to enable fish to gain access past a weir, sluice, dam or other structure in a river that would otherwise be impassable. There are a number of approaches to the design of fish passes, which are mostly variations on the themes of steps, slopes and lifts. |
Flood Risk Management | The activity of understanding the probability and consequences of flooding, and seeking to modify these factors to manage flood risk to people, property and the environment in line with agreed policy objectives. |
Floodplain | Area of land bordering a river that is prone to flooding. |
Geomorphology | The scientific study of the evolution and configuration of landforms (earth's land surface features). |
Glide | A section of stream characterised by moderately shallow water with an even flow that lacks pronounced turbulence. Although most frequently located immediately downstream of pools, glides are occasionally found in long, low gradient streams with stable banks and no major flow obstructions. The typical substrate is gravel and cobbles. |
Groyne | A structure projecting in to the river which is designed to constrict water flow and promote scouring and deposition of sediment |
Heavily Modified Water bodies | In the Water Framework Directive water bodies that have been physically altered to fulfil important 'uses' such as flood and coastal risk management are designated as Heavily Modified Waterbodies (HMWBs). Under the Water Framework Directive these water bodies are set the alternative target of Good Ecological Potential (GEP), which is achieved when all practical GEP Mitigation Measures are in place. |
Holt | a resting or breeding site for otters. Often found in the root system of large trees, but can also be constructed using large woody debris. |
Hydromorphology | Hydromorphology describes the characteristics of a water body. The hydrological and geomorphological elements and processes of water body systems (i.e. Lakes, Rivers, Transitional Waters and Coasts). |
Hydrology | Hydrology is the science of water movement |
Invasive Species | Indicates wheter invasive non-native species are present in the project site, this should be marked in particular when these species cause ecological problems. |
Invertebrates | An animal without a skeletal structure. |
Land drainage | Limiting the effect of flooding by maintaining surface water and land drainage systems. |
Land cover | Land cover is the material that makes up the ground. Land covers include fields, buildings, trees, bare ground, water, etc. |
Macroinvertebrates | Organisms that do not have a backbone and are visible without a microscope. |
Macrophytes | Large vascular aquatic plants that grow in shallow water along the shorelines of lakes or in the slow-moving reaches of river |
Maintenance | Work that sustains the desired condition and intended performance of an asset |
Managed realignment | The deliberate removal or breaching of existing seawalls or embankments in order to allow the waters of adjacent coasts or estuaries to inundate the land behind. |
Meander | A meander is a bend in a watercourse formed as water erodes the outer bank and deposits the eroded sediments on the inside of the bank. |
Mean discharge category | The average discharge of the river over the period of a year |
Mean annual discharge (m3/s) | The average discharge of the river over the period of a year |
Mitigation of a pressure | The pressure (in DPSIR terms) that was (one of the) reason(s) for starting this project. |
Morphology | The form and structure of the land surface (of relevance being formed by fluvial, coastal or estuarine processes) |
Pathways | Route that enables a hazard to propagate from a s ‘source’ to a ‘receptor’, as in the ‘source-pathway-receptor’ concept. A pathway must exist in order for a hazard to be realised. Pathways can be constrained in order to mitigate the risks |
Phytobenthos | The plants that live on the bed of the sea, lake or river |
Phytoplankton | The photosynthetic or plant constituent of plankton |
Physio-chemical | relating to both physical and chemical properties, changes, and reactions. |
Planform | The planform is the view of the river channel from above. Rivers are traditionally divided into a number of different planforms such as straight, meandering and braided planforms. For a diagram see: http://www.fgmorph.com/fg_4_17.php |
Poaching | River bank damage caused by the hooves of livestock which results in the loss of vegetation and soil erosion. |
Pollarding | similar to coppicing, except that the tree is cut at approximately head height to prevent damage by grazing animals. Typically done to manage willows. Trees managed in this way are known as pollards. |
Pool | a deep section of stream bed with very little surface flow, typically located at the outside of a bend. |
Protected species | Plants and animals that have been designated as requiring special protection under legislation. |
Revetment | Works to protect the bed or banks of a channel against erosion. |
Riffle | A length of stream with a steep gravel, pebble and/or cobble dominated bed, a fast flow and a broken water surface, where the water flows swiftly over the completely or partially submerged substrate. |
Riparian | Along the banks of a watercourse. Riparian zones support riparian vegetation and are of environmental importance, providing diverse habitats and supporting a range of ecological communities |
River Basin | A river basin is the area of land from which all surface run-off and spring water flows through a sequence of streams, lakes and rivers into the sea at a single river mouth, estuary or delta. It comprises one or more individual catchments. |
River Basin District | A river basin or several river basins, together with associated coastal waters. This definition is used as a description within the Water Framework Directive. |
River Corridor | The continuous area of river, riverbanks and immediately adjacent land alongside a river and its tributaries |
Run | Differs from a riffle in that, although the water surface is broken, the water depth is typically greater and the slope of the bed is less. |
Scour | Erosion of the bed or banks of a watercourse by the action of moving water. |
Sediment | Material ranging from clay to gravel (or even larger) that is transported in flowing water and that settles or tends to settle in areas where the flow slows down |
Sedimentation | The deposition of sediment in the bed of a channel or within a hydraulic structure |
Shoal | Sedimentation within or extending into a stream or other water body, typically composed of sand, silt and/or gravels. |
Sinuous | Sinuosity is a measure of deviation of a path between two points from the shortest possible path. A river that meanders is not taking the shortest path downstream and it therefore sinuous. |
Site designation | |
Sluice | An artificial channel for conducting water, with a valve or gate to regulate the flow |
Species Richness | The number of different species in an area. |
Spiling | The use of thin branches to create a woven ‘fence’ that protects the bank from erosion. |
Step-pool | See page: Step-pool |
Substrate | The material (e.g. rocks, sand, gravel) that forms the bed of a river or estuary. |
Subtidal | Continuously submerged areas of coastal areas |
Sustainability | The concept of development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs |
Taxonomic composition | The number and arrangement of distinct species that are found in an assemblage |
Tidal | The bottom of the river will be subject to tidal movements in the water level, however the river is still fresh water and has not become an estuary. |
Toe (of the riverbank): | Where the riverbed meets the bank. |
Unit stream power | This is the rate of energy dissipation against the bed and banks of a river per unit downstream length. You need values for the channel width, mean discharge and channel gradient, to calculate this value. |
Water body | Under the Water Framework Directive this is a manageable unit of surface water, being the whole (or part) of a stream, river or canal, lake or reservoir, transitional water (estuary) or stretch of coastal water. |
Water body codes | This unique code is given to each water body as part of delivering the Water Framework Directive |
Water Quality | The physical, chemical and biological characteristics of water |
Weir | A low dam built across a river to raise its water level or divert its flow |
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