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  • Living trees provide stable large wood in streams
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • California ; Channel geometry ; Habitat ; Riparian vegetation ; Stream ; United States of America ; Vegetation ; Wood
  • The AA. surveyed 20 stream reaches in Northern California with riparian corridors dominated by broadleaved trees and found that a high proportion of wood jams had key pieces that were still living. Living wood was capable of serving as a key piece
  • for a wood jam at a smaller size than dead wood and had a greater influence on channel morphology. Due to living wood, the range of tree species and sizes that provide stable and functional in-stream large wood may be broader than previously described.
  • Impacts of river restoration on small-wood dynamics in a low-gradient headwater stream
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • Based on tracing dowels to simulate small wood in 3 study reaches before and after restoration, this study provides a detailed representation of the influence of restoration on small-wood transport and the relative importance of different trapping
  • Characterizing the variability of wood in streams : simulation modelling compared with multiple-reach surveys
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • The AA. present 2 independent but complementary methods to develop frequency-volume distributions for wood in 200 m and 400 m reaches on tributaries of the Waihaha River, New Zealand. The first method uses a sliding window analysis of extensive wood
  • survey data, and the second method uses numerical models based on the Monte Carlo technique. The volume frequency distributions produced by the 2 methods are compared and their value in describing wood abundance in streams is discussed as well
  • as the implications for management of wood in streams.
  • Contribution of dead wood to the carbon flux in forested streams
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • The AA. evaluated the contribution of dead wood to the total carbon flux in 2 headwaters forested streams in northern Spain, one running under mature deciduous forest, the other under eucalyptus plantations. Breakdown rates were measured from
  • branches and compared with the breakdown loss of leaf litter calculated for the same reaches. So, fine dead wood contributes to a significant fraction of the total breakdown of allochtonous organic matter in the studied streams; other sizes of dead wood
  • increase the breakdown by an order of magnitude, and thus can result in a large part of the carbon flux being derived from wood.
  • Forest age, wood and nutrient dynamics in headwater streams of the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, NH
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • This study tested how instream uptake of nitrate and phosphate were affected by successional differences in the accumulation of large wood and debris dams in a 66-year chronosequence formed by 5 watersheds within the Hubbard Brook Experimental
  • age/large wood volume to increased abiotic adsorption of phosphate by the inorganic sediments retained by wood.
  • Geomorphic and riparian forest influences on characteristics of large wood and large-wood jams in old-growth and second-growth forests in Northern Michigan, USA
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • The AA. studied relationships between geomorphic and riparian factors and large wood (LW) and large-wood jams (LWJ) structure in different geomorphic settings associated with old-growth and second-growth settings in the Porcupine Mountains along
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue
  • Input of terrestrial coarse particulate organic matter (CPOM : leaves and small wood,>1 mm) adds food resources and habitat to streams. The AA. investigated retention characteristics under base-flow conditions in 65 stream reaches in pasture, native
  • Wood in world rivers. Special issue