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Ground-water surface-water interactions and long-term change in riverine riparian vegetation in the southwestern United States

Dates

Year
2006

Citation

Webb, Robert H, and Leake, Stanley A, 2006, Ground-water surface-water interactions and long-term change in riverine riparian vegetation in the southwestern United States: Journal of Hydrology, v. 320, iss. 3–4, p. 302-323.

Summary

Riverine riparian vegetation has changed throughout the southwestern United States, prompting concern about losses of habitat and biodiversity. Woody riparian vegetation grows in a variety of geomorphic settings ranging from bedrock-lined channels to perennial streams crossing deep alluvium and is dependent on interaction between ground-water and surface-water resources. Historically, few reaches in Arizona, southern Utah, or eastern California below 1530 m elevation had closed gallery forests of cottonwood and willow; instead, many alluvial reaches that now support riparian gallery forests once had marshy grasslands and most bedrock canyons were essentially barren. Repeat photography using more than 3000 historical images of rivers [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Communities

  • USGS National Research Program

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Provenance

Added to ScienceBase on Fri Apr 19 09:48:33 MDT 2013 by processing file <b>Landscape Change in the Southwest.xml</b> in item <a href="https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5042163ae4b04b508bfd3339">https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5042163ae4b04b508bfd3339</a>

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalJournal of Hydrology
parts
typePages
value302-323
typeVolume
value320
typeIssue
value3–4

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