Classification and Assessment Methods for Mountain Channel Habitats in the Chishui River Basin, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Region and Technical Procedures
2.2. Habitat Classification
2.2.1. Extraction of Basic Data
2.2.2. Parameters Used for the Habitat Classification
2.2.3. River Habitat Classification
2.3. Habitat Evaluation
2.3.1. Metrics Used for the Habitat Assessment Criteria
2.3.2. Habitat Sampling
2.3.3. Determination of Comprehensive Habitat Quality Index (CHQI)
3. Results
3.1. Spatial Habitat Types
3.2. CHQI and Habitat Health
3.3. Traits of the Metrics and Habitat Characteristics
4. Discussion
4.1. Performance of Our Habitat Assessment System
4.2. Habitat Status of the Chishui River Basin
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Habitat Metrics | Environmental Grades | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Excellent | Good | Fair | Poor | |
1 Water environmental status | ||||
Pool form | Balanced combination of deep and shallow pools | Deep pools are more than 50% | Shallow pools are more than 50% | Pools are less than 20% or there is no pools |
Transparency | Clear, transparency > 1 m or | Relatively clear, transparency is 0.5–1 m | Relatively turbid, transparency is 0.3–0.5 m | Very turbid, transparency < 0.3 m |
Water smell | No odor | Has a slight peculiar smell | Has obvious smell | Pungent smell |
Flow regime | All 4 flow regimes appear (slow-deep, slow-shallow, fast-deep, fast-shallow), slow is <0.3 m/s, and deep is >0.5 m | Only 3 flow regimes appear (lack of fast-shallow flow regimes have lower scores than others) | Only 2 flow regimes appear (lack of fast-shallow or slow-shallow have lower scores) | Dominated by 1 flow regime (deep-slow have lower score) |
Water color | Water color is transparent, no precipitation after standing | Water color is basically transparent, and there are some precipitation after standing | The water is darker and more algae | Water color is black or eutrophication |
2 River morphology | ||||
Riverbed type | Deep pools and shallow pools | Flat riverbed | Ladder flow or reservoir | Dry riverbed |
Sedimentation characteristics | 70% of the sediment suitable for aquatic organisms to settle (root plants, or gravels with a diameter of 20–256 mm) | 40–70% of the sediment suitable for aquatic organisms to settle (newly fallen trees are not suitable for settlement and have lower score) | The stable habitat is 20–40%, and the heterogeneity of bottom is low (such as the bedrock > 4000 mm) | The stable habitat is only less than 20%, the availability of substrate is low, and it is often severely disturbed or lacked. |
Silt coverage | Silt substrate is less than 10% | Silt substrate is about 10–40% | Silt substrate is about 40–60% | Silt substrate is more than 60% |
Embeddedness | 0–25% fine-grained sediments (0.06–2.0 mm in diameter) are embedded around pebbles and boulders, and the sediments show spatial diversity | 25–50% fine-grained sediment are embedded around pebbles and boulders | 50–75% fine-grained sediment are embedded around pebbles and boulders | More than 75% of fine-grained sediments are embedded around pebbles and boulders |
Sinuosity | Sinuosity is higher than 2.0, and the river course is extremely curved | Sinuosity is 1.5–2.0, and the river course is curved | Sinuosity is 1.2–1.5, the river course is slightly curved | Sinuosity is lower than 1.2, and the river course is straight |
River harden and canalization | Without channelization and hardening, river remains in natural condition | Hardened river course is less than 40% | Hardened river course is 40–80% | Hardened river course is more than 80% |
3 Riparian zone | ||||
Riparian stability | River bank is stable and the erosion area is less than 10% | River bank is relatively stable and the erosion area is 10–30% | River bank is unstable and the erosion area is less than 30–60% | River bank has collapsed and the erosion area is more than 60% |
Riparian plant width | Riparian plant width is higher than 18 m | Riparian plant width is 12–18 m | Riparian plant width is 6–12 m | Riparian plant width is less than 6 m |
Riparian plant coverage | 90% of the coastal zone with 50m of vegetation cover and various species | 70–90% of the coastal zone with 50m of vegetation cover and single species | 50–70% of the coastal zone with 50m of vegetation cover and partly exposed | Less than 50% of the coastal zone with 50m of vegetation cover and most exposed |
Dominant vegetation | There are more than 50% arbor forest | There are more than 50% shrubbery | There are more than 50% grassland | There are more than 50% farmland |
4 Human disturbance | ||||
Sewage outlet | There is no any sewage outlet | There is 1 sewage outlet in the river section, which is slightly polluted | There are 2 sewage outlets in the river section with obvious pollution | There are more than 3 sewage outlets in the river section |
Solid waste point | Keep neat and no garbage | There are scattered garbage fragments | There is 1 solid waste point, but not yet extended into the river | There are more than 2 solid waste points and have spread to the river |
dams and channel engineering | There is no dam or channel engineering, no shipping activities | There is 1 dam or channel engineering, and occasional shipping activities | There are 2 dams or channel engineering and shipping activities are more frequent | There are 3 dams or channel engineering and some shipping terminals |
Cross-river bridge | There is no bridge across the river | There is 1 bridge across the river | There are 2 bridges across the river, and at least one bridge has occasional traffic | There are 3 bridges across the river, and at least one bridge has frequent traffic with loud noise |
Residential area and industry | There are only less than 10% residential or industrial areas in the 50 m of coastal zone | There are 10–30% residential or industrial areas in the 50 m of coastal zone | There are 30–50% residential or industrial areas in the 50 m of coastal zone | There are more than 50% residential or industrial areas in the 50 m of coastal zone |
Score | 10 9 | 8 7 6 | 5 4 3 | 2 1 0 |
Habitat Types | Number of Data Sites | Proportion | Average Elevation (m) | Average Sinuosity (km/km) | Average Slope (km/km) | Average River Network Density (km/km2) | Average Stream Order |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steep tributaries habitat | 15 | 12.50% | 484.60 | 1.41 | 0.0186 | 0.062 | 1 |
High-altitude headwater habitat | 41 | 34.17% | 996.49 | 1.28 | 0.0119 | 0.073 | 1.15 |
Upstream dense river net habitat | 12 | 10.00% | 709.67 | 1.24 | 0.0081 | 0.100 | 2.92 |
Midstream low-curved habitat | 27 | 22.50% | 397.26 | 1.24 | 0.0031 | 0.088 | 3.04 |
Low-altitude estuary tributaries habitat | 3 | 2.50% | 227.67 | 2.16 | 0.0020 | 0.164 | 2 |
Downstream flat habitat | 22 | 18.33% | 258.64 | 1.60 | 0.0021 | 0.089 | 4 |
Groups | Average Similarity (%) | Groups | Average Dissimilarity (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Group 1 | 97.89 | Groups 1 and 2 | 5.39 |
Group 2 | 97.13 | Groups 1 and 3 | 7.16 |
Group 3 | 98.47 | Groups 1 and 4 | 6.99 |
Group 4 | 96.37 | Groups 1 and 5 | 9.69 |
Group 5 | 98.77 | Groups 1 and 6 | 10.74 |
Group 6 | 97.78 | Groups 2 and 3 | 6.09 |
Groups 2 and 4 | 9.82 | ||
Groups 2 and 5 | 13.48 | ||
Groups 2 and 6 | 14.12 | ||
Groups 3 and 4 | 4.92 | ||
Groups 3 and 5 | 10.75 | ||
Groups 3 and 6 | 8.3 | ||
Groups 4 and 5 | 7.79 | ||
Groups 4 and 6 | 5.14 | ||
Groups 5 and 6 | 6.36 |
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Yu, F.; Liu, F.; Xia, Z.; Lin, P.; Xu, C.; Wang, J.; Hou, M.; Zou, X. Classification and Assessment Methods for Mountain Channel Habitats in the Chishui River Basin, China. Water 2022, 14, 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14040515
Yu F, Liu F, Xia Z, Lin P, Xu C, Wang J, Hou M, Zou X. Classification and Assessment Methods for Mountain Channel Habitats in the Chishui River Basin, China. Water. 2022; 14(4):515. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14040515
Chicago/Turabian StyleYu, Fandong, Fei Liu, Zhijun Xia, Pengcheng Lin, Chunsen Xu, Jianwei Wang, Miaomiao Hou, and Xinhua Zou. 2022. "Classification and Assessment Methods for Mountain Channel Habitats in the Chishui River Basin, China" Water 14, no. 4: 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14040515
APA StyleYu, F., Liu, F., Xia, Z., Lin, P., Xu, C., Wang, J., Hou, M., & Zou, X. (2022). Classification and Assessment Methods for Mountain Channel Habitats in the Chishui River Basin, China. Water, 14(4), 515. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14040515