Abstract
Impacts of Columbia River discharge on salmonid habitat: 2. Changes in shallow-water habitat
Impacts of Columbia River discharge on salmonid habitat: 2. Changes in shallow-water habitat
Tobias Kukulka
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, School of Science and Engineering, Oregon Graduate Institute of Science
and Technology, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon, USA
David A. Jay
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, School of Science and Engineering, Oregon Graduate Institute of Science
and Technology, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon, USA
This is the second part of an investigation that analyzes human alteration of shallow-water habitat (SWH) available to juvenile
salmonids in the tidal Lower Columbia River. Part 2 develops a one-dimensional, subtidal river stage model that explains ∼90%
of the stage variance in the tidal river. This model and the tidal model developed in
part 1 [
Kukulka and Jay, 2003
] uncouple the nonlinear interaction of river tides and river stage by referring both to external forcing by river discharge,
ocean tides, and atmospheric pressure. Applying the two models, daily high-water levels were predicted for a reach from rkm-50
to rkm-90 during 1974 to 1998, the period of contemporary management. Predicted water levels were related to the bathymetry
and topography to determine the changes in shallow-water habitat area (SWHA) caused by flood control dikes and altered flow
management. Model results suggest that diking and a >40% reduction of peak flows have reduced SWHA by ∼62% during the crucial
spring freshet period during which juvenile salmon use of SWHA is maximal. Taken individually, diking and flow cycle alteration
reduced spring freshet SWHA by 52% and 29%, respectively. SWHA has been both displaced to lower elevations and modified in
its character because tidal range has increased. Our models of these processes are economical for the very long simulations
(seasons to centuries) needed to understand historic changes and climate impacts on SWH. Through analysis of the nonlinear
processes controlling surface elevation in a tidal river, we have identified some of the mechanisms that link freshwater discharge
to SWH and salmonid survival.
Received 19
February
2003;
accepted 27
June
2003;
published 12
September
2003.
Citation: Kukulka, T., and D. A. Jay
(2003),
Impacts of Columbia River discharge on salmonid habitat: 2. Changes in shallow-water habitat,
J. Geophys. Res.,
108(C9),
3294,
doi:10.1029/2003JC001829.