INTEC   05402
INSTITUTO DE DESARROLLO TECNOLOGICO PARA LA INDUSTRIA QUIMICA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
The River Machine: A Template for Fish Movement and Habitat, Fluvial Geomorphology, Fluid Dynamics, and Biogeochemical Cycling.
Autor/es:
JOHN NESTLER; A. GOODWIN; DAVID SMITH; PAULO POMPEU; LUIZ SILVA; CLAUDIO R.M. BAIGÚN; NORBERTO OLDANI
Revista:
RIVER RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS
Editorial:
JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: New York; Año: 2010
ISSN:
1535-1459
Resumen:
The dynamics of many large floodplain rivers are dominated by the flood pulse. The high energy flows associated with the flood pulse form and reform the river channel. In general, the flood pulse supports the immense abundance and diversity of river life by transporting nutrients and organic matter into backwaters in spring, supporting primary and secondary production during the summer, and redistributing these products to channels as water levels recede. Both North American and South American fluvial dependent large river fishes exhibit complex, system-level longitudinal and/or lateral movements across life stages that allow them to exploit flood pulse driven spatial heterogeneity and seasonal connectivity to feed, reproduce, and avoid harsh conditions. We argue that two hydraulic variables, the magnitudes of velocity and the spatial velocity gradient, are necessary and sufficient to both understand fish “hydro-navigation” as well as explain patterns in biogeochemistry and fluvial geomorphology and thereby create a new conceptual framework for large flood plain rivers integrating fluid dynamics, channel morphology, biogeochemical cycling, and important elements of fish ecology. We illustrate the framework using summary data from the São Francisco River, Brazil that contains sub basins possessing different levels of impact. We believe the framework is an important element of large river restoration because it directly links the unique physical and chemical processes of large floodplain rivers to life requirements important to fishes and other biota.