2013
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.9728
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Potential effects of climate change on streambed scour and risks to salmonid survival in snow‐dominated mountain basins

Abstract: Abstract:Snowmelt-dominated basins in northern latitudes provide critical habitat for salmonids. As such, these systems may be especially vulnerable to climate change because of potential shifts in the frequency, magnitude, and timing of flows that can scour incubating embryos. A general framework is presented to examine this issue, using a series of physical models that link climate change, streamflow, and channel morphology to predict the magnitude and spatial distribution of streambed scour and consequent r… Show more

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Cited by 81 publications
(115 citation statements)
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“…Goode et al, 2013). These modelling studies seek to understand in-stream ecological processes which are influ- enced by larger scale landscape hydrology, rather than simply in-stream hydraulics, such as the PHABSIM model (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Goode et al, 2013). These modelling studies seek to understand in-stream ecological processes which are influ- enced by larger scale landscape hydrology, rather than simply in-stream hydraulics, such as the PHABSIM model (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst there is a long-history of studies that look at the effects of flow regimes or local hydraulic interactions on in-stream biota in environmental flow assessment (e.g. see review in Gordon et al, 2004), relatively few of these have a wider hydrological landscape context as advocated by Tetzlaff et al (2007a). Recent work and the development of commercial software such as MIKE-SHE that allow such holistic studies have mainly used highly parameterized hydrological models (Loinaz et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…pdf). We also considered the potential for more frequent high flows during the in-gravel egg incubation and rearing stage, due to increases in precipitation (Warner et al 2014) and more transient hydrology dominated by both rain and snow (Mantua et al 2010), to increase streambed scour and so also egg and larval fish mortality (Lapointe et al 2000, Goode et al 2013. To simulate the population response to greater scour due to higher flows during the ingravel stage, we included a scenario with a 25% increase in mortality through this stage.…”
Section: Climate Hydrology Landscapementioning
confidence: 99%