What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos

From 1930-1990 the river Bognelv in Troms-Finnmark County was strongly affected by technical intervention related to flood security which led to interruption of bed material transfer, and dramatical declination of salmonid densities. The first restoration measurements were conducted in 2006 and are...

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Main Author: Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff
Other Authors: Colman, Jonathan Edward, Haugen, Thrond Oddvar
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2721175
id ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2721175
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU
op_collection_id ftunivmob
language English
topic River restoration
Hydromorphological changes
Tracer rocks
Aerial photos
Bedload transport
VDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400
spellingShingle River restoration
Hydromorphological changes
Tracer rocks
Aerial photos
Bedload transport
VDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400
Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff
What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
topic_facet River restoration
Hydromorphological changes
Tracer rocks
Aerial photos
Bedload transport
VDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400
description From 1930-1990 the river Bognelv in Troms-Finnmark County was strongly affected by technical intervention related to flood security which led to interruption of bed material transfer, and dramatical declination of salmonid densities. The first restoration measurements were conducted in 2006 and are still ongoing. This thesis is the fifth study or river restoration in Bognelv and highlights the importance of having knowledge of hydromorphological constraints on bedload transport, such as channelization, since it controls and defines both channel morphology and habitats. The meandering but still channelized river Bognelv was studied in order to analyse whether the conducted measurements up to date have had a positive effect on bedload transport and the hydromorphological environment in the way that the river system is more dynamic and capable of changing its own hydromorphology with natural processes. This has been analyzed by means of tracking transportation of rocks, taking hydromorphological cross sections, and analyzing changes of hydromorphological features from aerial photographs. Data from bedload tracer experiments were compiled between May 2019 and November 2019. Sediment tracking was done by using Passive Integrated Transponders (PIT) tags inserted into 111 gravel rocks which were registered in the river after one transport episode. Conditions in field during late fall 2019 highlights the limitation of data and recovery rate. Analysis from the data compiled showed that magnitude of peak discharge could not be set to be the major transport control, but tracer travel distances showed some scale dependence in the morphological configuration of the channel. Transport distances were different in restored versus unrestored river sections. Rocks seemed to travel longer in the channelized river sections, as pools seems to be a more efficient trap for travelling gravels. It is expected that in the future with more data and transport episodes, the weak tendency with effect of pools slowing down travel distance will be enhanced and much clearer. These results from tracer travel distance and comparison of aerial photographs highlights that river restoration is heading in the right direction, and has a positive effect on the river hydromorphology in the way that the river has achieved more structural variation. Bognelv has changed its pattern from fully channelized to some meandering with riffle-pool sequences. Both river width and length has increased, and more morphological features such as meanders, pools, riffles, and island are formed in the river. As some of the data in this study shows weak predictions, they are assumed to be insufficient to draw decisive conclusions about the rivers capability of changing its own morphology. With more measurements and transport episodes predictions can be improved. Bognelv is a river with many different interests that limits the river to only be partial restored. It is recommended that restoration measures should still be conducted as the hydromorphology only can become better with improved strategies and knowledge from past projects through monitoring. A favourable situation for the river to become more natural again with free lateral movement would be if they removed all erosion security and replaced them with vegetation zone where it is necessary for flooding. «Hva ruller I Bognelv?» En case studie om hydromorfologiske forhold før, under og etter restaurering av en kanalisert elv basert på sporing av stein og flyfoto. Fra 1930-1990 ble Bognelv i Troms-Finnmark fylke sterkt påvirket av tekniske inngrep relatert til flomsikring. Dette relaterte i avbrudd av transport av bunnmateriale, og dramatisk tilgang i fisketetthet. De første restaureringsmålingene ble utført i 2006 og pågår fortsatt. Denne studien er den femte masteroppgaven som er relatert til elverestaurering i Bognelv, og understreker viktigheten av å ha kunnskap om de hydromorfologiske begrensningene, slik som kanalisering, som påvirker bunntransport siden de både kontrollerer og definerer elvemorfologien samt habitater. Den svingete, men fremdeles kanaliserte elva har i denne studien blitt studert med ønske om å undersøke om de utførte restaurerings tiltakene hittil har hatt en positiv effekt på bunntransport og det hydromorfologiske miljøet, i den grad at elva er mer dynamisk og er i stand til å endre sin egen morfologi med naturlige prosesser. Undersøkelsen har blitt analysert ved å spore transport av steiner, ta hydromorfologiske tverrsnitt og analysere hydromorfologiske endringer fra flyfoto. Data fra bunntransport ble innsamlet mellom mai 2019 og november 2019. Steinsporing ble gjort ved å bruke passive integrerte radiosendere (PITs) som ble drillet inn i 111 steiner som senere ble registrert i elva etter én transport episode. Forhold i felt høsten 2019 og vinter 2020 fremhever begrensningene av data og gjenfinningsraten av steinene. M-MINA
author2 Colman, Jonathan Edward
Haugen, Thrond Oddvar
format Master Thesis
author Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff
author_facet Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff
author_sort Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff
title What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
title_short What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
title_full What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
title_fullStr What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
title_full_unstemmed What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
title_sort what’s rocking in bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos
publisher Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2721175
op_coverage Norway, Finnmark, Bognelv
long_lat ENVELOPE(15.661,15.661,67.546,67.546)
ENVELOPE(29.736,29.736,70.082,70.082)
ENVELOPE(22.317,22.317,70.017,70.017)
geographic Norway
Elva
Finnmark Fylke
Bognelv
geographic_facet Norway
Elva
Finnmark Fylke
Bognelv
genre Finnmark
Finnmark
Troms
genre_facet Finnmark
Finnmark
Troms
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2721175
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
_version_ 1765999534731689984
spelling ftunivmob:oai:nmbu.brage.unit.no:11250/2721175 2023-05-15T16:13:42+02:00 What’s rocking in Bognelv? : a case study in hydromorphological conditions before, during and after restoration of a channelized river by studying tracer rocks and aerial photos Johansen, Maja Konstanse Bernhoff Colman, Jonathan Edward Haugen, Thrond Oddvar Norway, Finnmark, Bognelv 2020 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2721175 eng eng Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2721175 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.no CC-BY-NC-ND River restoration Hydromorphological changes Tracer rocks Aerial photos Bedload transport VDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400 Master thesis 2020 ftunivmob 2021-09-23T20:14:50Z From 1930-1990 the river Bognelv in Troms-Finnmark County was strongly affected by technical intervention related to flood security which led to interruption of bed material transfer, and dramatical declination of salmonid densities. The first restoration measurements were conducted in 2006 and are still ongoing. This thesis is the fifth study or river restoration in Bognelv and highlights the importance of having knowledge of hydromorphological constraints on bedload transport, such as channelization, since it controls and defines both channel morphology and habitats. The meandering but still channelized river Bognelv was studied in order to analyse whether the conducted measurements up to date have had a positive effect on bedload transport and the hydromorphological environment in the way that the river system is more dynamic and capable of changing its own hydromorphology with natural processes. This has been analyzed by means of tracking transportation of rocks, taking hydromorphological cross sections, and analyzing changes of hydromorphological features from aerial photographs. Data from bedload tracer experiments were compiled between May 2019 and November 2019. Sediment tracking was done by using Passive Integrated Transponders (PIT) tags inserted into 111 gravel rocks which were registered in the river after one transport episode. Conditions in field during late fall 2019 highlights the limitation of data and recovery rate. Analysis from the data compiled showed that magnitude of peak discharge could not be set to be the major transport control, but tracer travel distances showed some scale dependence in the morphological configuration of the channel. Transport distances were different in restored versus unrestored river sections. Rocks seemed to travel longer in the channelized river sections, as pools seems to be a more efficient trap for travelling gravels. It is expected that in the future with more data and transport episodes, the weak tendency with effect of pools slowing down travel distance will be enhanced and much clearer. These results from tracer travel distance and comparison of aerial photographs highlights that river restoration is heading in the right direction, and has a positive effect on the river hydromorphology in the way that the river has achieved more structural variation. Bognelv has changed its pattern from fully channelized to some meandering with riffle-pool sequences. Both river width and length has increased, and more morphological features such as meanders, pools, riffles, and island are formed in the river. As some of the data in this study shows weak predictions, they are assumed to be insufficient to draw decisive conclusions about the rivers capability of changing its own morphology. With more measurements and transport episodes predictions can be improved. Bognelv is a river with many different interests that limits the river to only be partial restored. It is recommended that restoration measures should still be conducted as the hydromorphology only can become better with improved strategies and knowledge from past projects through monitoring. A favourable situation for the river to become more natural again with free lateral movement would be if they removed all erosion security and replaced them with vegetation zone where it is necessary for flooding. «Hva ruller I Bognelv?» En case studie om hydromorfologiske forhold før, under og etter restaurering av en kanalisert elv basert på sporing av stein og flyfoto. Fra 1930-1990 ble Bognelv i Troms-Finnmark fylke sterkt påvirket av tekniske inngrep relatert til flomsikring. Dette relaterte i avbrudd av transport av bunnmateriale, og dramatisk tilgang i fisketetthet. De første restaureringsmålingene ble utført i 2006 og pågår fortsatt. Denne studien er den femte masteroppgaven som er relatert til elverestaurering i Bognelv, og understreker viktigheten av å ha kunnskap om de hydromorfologiske begrensningene, slik som kanalisering, som påvirker bunntransport siden de både kontrollerer og definerer elvemorfologien samt habitater. Den svingete, men fremdeles kanaliserte elva har i denne studien blitt studert med ønske om å undersøke om de utførte restaurerings tiltakene hittil har hatt en positiv effekt på bunntransport og det hydromorfologiske miljøet, i den grad at elva er mer dynamisk og er i stand til å endre sin egen morfologi med naturlige prosesser. Undersøkelsen har blitt analysert ved å spore transport av steiner, ta hydromorfologiske tverrsnitt og analysere hydromorfologiske endringer fra flyfoto. Data fra bunntransport ble innsamlet mellom mai 2019 og november 2019. Steinsporing ble gjort ved å bruke passive integrerte radiosendere (PITs) som ble drillet inn i 111 steiner som senere ble registrert i elva etter én transport episode. Forhold i felt høsten 2019 og vinter 2020 fremhever begrensningene av data og gjenfinningsraten av steinene. M-MINA Master Thesis Finnmark Finnmark Troms Open archive Norwegian University of Life Sciences: Brage NMBU Norway Elva ENVELOPE(15.661,15.661,67.546,67.546) Finnmark Fylke ENVELOPE(29.736,29.736,70.082,70.082) Bognelv ENVELOPE(22.317,22.317,70.017,70.017)