Riparian Ecosystem Management at Military Installations: Determination of Impacts and Restoration and Enhancement Strategies
RC-1186
Objective
A riparian zone at Fort Benning, Georgia, illustrating heavy erosion and sedimentation.
The Department of Defense recognizes the critical importance of riparian ecosystems as habitat and for maintaining the water quality and ecological integrity of streams and rivers draining military installations. Riparian ecosystems at many military installations are stressed to an unknown degree by singular and interactive effects of training activities involving mechanized vehicles and other disruptive activities such as prescribed fires for forest management efforts to reduce fuel loads. This research is designed to evaluate these impacts on riparian ecosystems and investigate potential remediation strategies by conducting an intensive study at Fort Benning, Georgia, where riparian disturbances are significant and typical of those experienced at other military installations
The objectives of this project are to identify the impacts to riparian ecosystem function of upland and riparian disturbances resulting from military training and to evaluate two riparian restoration strategies.
Technical Approach
Key riparian (vegetation, soil) and stream (water chemistry, metabolism, algal/macroinvertebrate communities) ecosystem properties are being compared across disturbance gradients and before and after riparian restoration. In Phase 1, three reference catchments and eight disturbed catchments were studied that cover a range of upland and direct riparian disturbances. Impacts of disturbance to riparian functions were determined by making an extensive set of measurements in riparian and stream ecosystems and applying a combination of analysis of variance and regression analysis. In Phase 2, the eight disturbed catchments received one of the following four treatments: (1) control (no restoration), (2) revegetation of ephemeral channels, (3) woody debris additions to ephemeral and perennial channels, and (4) a combination of revegetation and woody debris additions to ephemeral and perennial channels. To determine the effects of restoration, the same set of measurements used in Phase 1 are continued and randomized intervention analysis (RIA) is applied. RIA involves calculation of the difference between restored and control treatments for each measurement, paired in time, spanning the period before (2 years) and after (3.5 years) restoration.
Results
Results have shown that activities leading to more than approximately 8% of the watershed becoming highly disturbed produce significant negative impacts on hydrology, water quality, and biological habitat of streams. Ephemeral drainage restoration decreased sediment accumulation by about 80% on disturbed riparian plots located downstream from restoration sites. However, no clear indications exist that indices of nutrient cycling responded to restoration efforts. In-stream restorations increased the hydraulic complexity and rate of nutrient uptake relative to control streams; however, no evidence yet indicates increases in gross primary production. Positive responses of stream biota and habitat variables to wood additions were observed in some streams.
Project Documents
Symposium & Workshop
FY 2013 New Start Project Selections
Points of Contact
Principal Investigator
Dr. Patrick Mulholland
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
Phone: 865-574-7304
Fax: 865-576-8543
Program Manager
Resource Conservation and Climate Change
SERDP and ESTCP
Project Documents
Document Types
- Fact Sheet - Brief project summary with links to related documents and points of contact.
- Final Report - Comprehensive report for every completed SERDP and ESTCP project that contains all technical results.
- Cost & Performance Report - Overview of ESTCP demonstration activities, results, and conclusions, standardized to facilitate implementation decisions.
- Technical Report - Additional interim reports, laboratory reports, demonstration reports, and technology survey reports.
- Guidance - Instructional information on technical topics such as protocols and user’s guides.
- Workshop Report - Summary of workshop discussion and findings.
- Multimedia - On demand videos, animations, and webcasts highlighting featured initiatives or technologies.
- Model/Software - Computer programs and applications available for download.
- Database - Digitally organized collection of data available to search and access.
