River Studies by USGS

News Release
U.S. Department of the Interior
U.S. Geological Survey
Columbia Environmental Research Center
4200 New Haven Road
Columbia, MO  65201
Release :	April 1, 1999
Contact:	Marcia K. Nelson	573-876-1875
	Robert Jacobson	573-875-5399
USGS Opens River Studies Station in Missouri
>From the drastic impacts of major floods and droughts to more gradual
shifts in channel, sandbar and floodplain habitats, large river systems
such as the Missouri are always changing. Over the past century human
activities also have caused physical and biological changes in such rivers.
Gathering the many layers of information needed to understand the dynamic
nature of large rivers, as well as the biological systems they support,
will be the focus of a new USGS River Studies Station, located at the USGS
Columbia Environmental Research Center in Columbia, Missouri.
The new station, says center director Bill Mauck, will allow experts in
large riverine systems to work together to answer complex questions about
how large river systems function. The emphasis of the new station will be
on field studies that can provide the information needed to improve river
management and guide habitat restoration efforts for resource managers and
policy makers.
The initial focus of the River Studies Station, Mauck says, will be on the
lower Missouri River, which has been extensively managed for navigation,
flood control and power generation since the 1800s. These practices, said
Mauck, have fixed the once-wandering river channel in place and reduced or
eliminated connections between the main channel and surrounding floodplain
habitats.
USGS research hydrologist Dr. Robert Jacobson says a number of biological
changes, including declines in some riverine species, such as pallid
sturgeon, have been attributed to river management activities and habitat
alteration in the lower Missouri corridor. But, he says, only limited
knowledge exists about how the fish and wildlife of large rivers respond to
changes in management practices. Consequently, the station will have
researchers who are experts in many different areas working together to
determine causes and effects by relating changes in habitat to changes in
fish, wildlife and invertebrate populations.
Jacobson said one set of studies already under way focuses on two
physically similar stretches of river that differ greatly in management
approaches. Both river stretches were severely affected by flooding in
1993.  In the Overton Bottom reach, just west of Columbia, management plans
call for the construction of side channels and engineered wetlands that
will be subject to controlled flooding. A short distance upriver in the Big
Muddy National Fish and Wildlife Refuge, the Lisbon Bottom reach and
surrounding wetlands will be passively managed, allowing a natural response
to take place. As a result of levee breaches and channel shifts caused by
the 1993 flood and subsequent floods in 1995 and 1996, natural flood
dynamics were partially restored to the Lisbon Bottom area.
Jacobson says the USGS River Studies Station scientists will compare the
managed and naturally flooded areas in terms of surface- and ground-water
flows, erosion and sediment deposits and water quality. They will also
monitor invertebrate, fish and waterbird populations. In addition to basic
knowledge of river processes, Mauck said the comparisons should yield
insights into the cost and effectiveness of different management and
restoration strategies.
Mauck adds that detailed field studies such as the one at Lisbon Bottom
will be used to develop models that can be applied in other rivers and
habitats. "Our work will be useful in guiding restoration in other areas,"
he says.
The River Studies Station will house experts in a number of areas,
including fisheries, aquatic invertebrates, ecology, hydrology, floodplain
processes and remote sensing. Station researchers will also monitor a wide
range of geological, hydrological and biological factors in collaboration
with other USGS facilities, other federal agencies, state agencies and
universities.
As the nation's largest water, earth and biological science and civilian
mapping agency, the USGS works in cooperation with more than 2000
organizations across the country to provide reliable, impartial, scientific
information to resource managers, planners, and other customers. This
information is gathered in every state by USGS scientists to minimize the
loss of life and property from natural disasters, to contribute to the
conservation and the sound economic and physical development of the
nation's natural resources, and to enhance the quality of life by
monitoring water, biological, energy, and mineral resources.
### USGS ###
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