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Vegetation and channel adjustment trajectories in cold regions: The effects of ice disturbances in two Gaspesian rivers

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
  • Prugne, Matthieu (Auteur)
  • Corenblit, Dov (Auteur)
  • Boivin, Maxime (Auteur)
  • Buffin‐Bélanger, Thomas (Auteur)
Titre
Vegetation and channel adjustment trajectories in cold regions: The effects of ice disturbances in two Gaspesian rivers
Résumé
Abstract Fluvial biogeomorphology has proven to be efficient in understanding the evolution of rivers in terms of vegetation succession and channel adjustment. The role of floods as the primary disturbance regime factor has been widely studied, and our knowledge of their effects on vegetation and channel adjustment has grown significantly in the last two decades. However, cold rivers experiencing ice dynamics (e.g., ice jams and mechanical breakups) as an additional disturbance regime have not yet been studied within a biogeomorphological scope. This study investigated the long‐term effects of ice dynamics on channel adjustments and vegetation trajectories in two rivers with different geomorphological behaviours, one laterally confined (Matapédia River) and one mobile (Petite‐Cascapédia River), in Quebec, Canada. Using dendrochronological analysis, historical data and aerial photographs from 1963 to 2016, this study reconstructed ice jam chronologies, characterized flood regimes and analysed vegetation and channel changes through a photointerpretation approach. The main findings of this study indicate that geomorphological impacts of mechanical ice breakups are not significant at the decadal and reach scales and that they might not be the primary factors of long‐term geomorphological control. However, results have shown that vegetation was more sensitive to ice dynamics. Reaches presenting frequent ice jams depicted high regression rates and turnovers even during years with very low floods, suggesting that ice dynamics significantly increase shear stress on plant patches. This study also highlights the high resiliency of both rivers to ice jam disturbances, with vegetation communities and channel forms recovering within a decade. With the uncertainties following the reach/corridor and decadal scales, future research should focus on long‐term monitoring and refined spatial scales to better understand the mechanisms behind the complex interactions among ice dynamics, vegetation and hydrogeomorphological processes in cold rivers.
Publication
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
Volume
50
Numéro
5
Pages
e70051
Date
04/2025
Abrév. de revue
Earth Surf Processes Landf
Langue
en
DOI
10.1002/esp.70051
ISSN
0197-9337, 1096-9837
Titre abrégé
Vegetation and channel adjustment trajectories in cold regions
URL
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/esp.70051
Consulté le
2025-05-29 13 h 52
Catalogue de bibl.
DOI.org (Crossref)
Référence
Prugne, M., Corenblit, D., Boivin, M., & Buffin‐Bélanger, T. (2025). Vegetation and channel adjustment trajectories in cold regions: The effects of ice disturbances in two Gaspesian rivers. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 50(5), e70051. https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.70051
Lieux
  • Québec (province)
Types d'événements extrêmes
  • Évènements liés au froid (neige, glace)
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/riisq/bibliographie/87879M32
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