8 results on '"Piégay, H."'
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2. Can lateral mobility be restored along a highly domesticated low-energy gravel-bed river?
- Author
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Dépret T, Thommeret N, Piégay H, and Gautier E
- Subjects
- France, Rivers, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Fluvial engineering works such as weirs, rip-rap, groynes, and dykes have constrained for decades and more the lateral mobility of rivers, one of the key drivers of aquatic and riparian diversity. Preserving or restoring a sufficient space for river mobility has therefore become a major river management focus. Because the success and relevance of management actions are conditioned by the level of energy and sediment supply of rivers, such actions are generally considered unsuitable for low-energy rivers. However, some low-energy rivers have numerous ancient engineering works along their length, especially bank protections, suggesting a potential capacity for bed migration. In this context, it is essential to determine to what extent planform dynamics is disturbed, and if lateral mobility can be restored. Herein, a case study was done on a 146 km stretch of the low-energy meandering gravel-bed Cher River (France). The goal of the study was to estimate the remnant shifting capacity, identify the factors controlling the location and intensity of lateral erosion, determine the potential for preserving and restoring lateral mobility, and examine management measures that could be implemented to this end. For that, field surveys, analysis of existing databases, aerial photographs, and laser imaging detection and ranging digital elevation model (LiDAR DEM) data were combined. The study revealed a strong longitudinal fragmentation of the river, with most of it laterally constrained due to the presence of anthropogenic structures such as bank protections, former gravel pits in the alluvial plain, bridges, and weirs. The river is now composed of a string of constrained and unconstrained reaches, and the space available for river shifting has been dramatically reduced. Due to these fluvial engineering works and anthropogenic legacies, the potential for lateral movement of the riverbed, and, therefore, diversification of riparian and aquatic habitats, is limited. Furthermore, lateral mobility could be preserved or restored only for very short sections of the river. It is therefore highly unlikely that good ecological status could be achieved on the entire river corridor through removal of bank protections. Nevertheless, a possible solution could be combining bank protection removals with a series of gravel augmentations close to each other., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Long-term river management legacies strongly alter riparian forest attributes and constrain restoration strategies along a large, multi-use river.
- Author
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Janssen P, Stella JC, Räpple B, Gruel CR, Seignemartin G, Pont B, Dufour S, and Piégay H
- Subjects
- Forests, Humans, Mediterranean Sea, Trees, Ecosystem, Rivers
- Abstract
Many terrestrial ecosystems have undergone profound transformation under the pressure of multiple human stressors. This may have oriented altered ecosystems toward transient or new states. Understanding how these cumulative impacts influence ecosystem functions, services and ecological trajectories is therefore essential to defining effective restoration strategies. This is particularly the case in riverine ecosystems, where the profound alteration of natural disturbance regimes can make the effectiveness of restoration operations questionable. Using the case study of legacy dike fields, i.e., area delimited by longitudinal and lateral dikes, along the regulated Rhône River, we studied the impacts of long-term channelization and flow regulation on environmental conditions and riparian forests attributes along a 200 km climatic gradient. We characterized the imprint of human stressors on these forests by comparing the dike field stands to more natural stands in both young and mature vegetation stages. Across four reaches of the river between Lyon and the Mediterranean Sea, we found that channelization consistently promoted high rate of overbank sedimentation and rapid disconnection of dike field surfaces from the channel. The rapid terrestrialisation of dike field surfaces, i.e., the process by which former aquatic areas transition to a terrestrial ecosystem as a result of dewatering or sedimentation, fostered a pulse of riparian forest regeneration in these resource-rich environments that differs from more natural sites in structure and composition. Within the dike fields, older pre-dam stands are dominated by post-pioneer and exotic species, and post-dam stands support large, aging pioneer trees with a largely exotic understory regeneration layer. These patterns were associated with differences in the relative surface elevation among dike fields, whereas species shifts generally followed the river's longitudinal climate gradient. To enhance the functionality of these human-made ecosystems, restoration strategies should target the reconnection of dike fields to the river by dismantling part of the dikes to promote lateral erosion, forest initiation and community succession, as well as increasing minimum flows in channels to improve connection with groundwater. However, since a river-wide return to a pre-disturbance state is very unlikely, a pragmatic approach should be favoured, focusing on local actions that can improve abiotic and biotic function, and ultimately enhancing ecosystem services such biodiversity, habitat, and recreation opportunities., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Characterizing and modelling river channel migration rates at a regional scale: Case study of south-east France.
- Author
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Alber A and Piégay H
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring, France, Mediterranean Sea, Water Movements, Ecosystem, Rivers
- Abstract
An increased awareness by river managers of the importance of river channel migration to sediment dynamics, habitat complexity and other ecosystem functions has led to an advance in the science and practice of identifying, protecting or restoring specific erodible corridors across which rivers are free to migrate. One current challenge is the application of these watershed-specific goals at the regional planning scales (e.g., the European Water Framework Directive). This study provides a GIS-based spatial analysis of the channel migration rates at the regional-scale. As a case study, 99 reaches were sampled in the French part of the Rhône Basin and nearby tributaries of the Mediterranean Sea (111,300 km
2 ). We explored the spatial correlation between the channel migration rate and a set of simple variables (e.g., watershed area, channel slope, stream power, active channel width). We found that the spatial variability of the channel migration rates was primary explained by the gross stream power (R2 = 0.48) and more surprisingly by the active channel width scaled by the watershed area. The relationship between the absolute migration rate and the gross stream power is generally consistent with the published empirical models for freely meandering rivers, whereas it is less significant for the multi-thread reaches. The discussion focused on methodological constraints for a regional-scale modelling of the migration rates, and the interpretation of the empirical models. We hypothesize that the active channel width scaled by the watershed area is a surrogate for the sediment supply which may be a more critical factor than the bank resistance for explaining the regional-scale variability of the migration rates., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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5. Multi-temporal monitoring of a regional riparian buffer network (>12,000 km) with LiDAR and photogrammetric point clouds.
- Author
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Michez A, Piégay H, Lejeune P, and Claessens H
- Subjects
- Belgium, Europe, Trees, Environmental Monitoring, Forests, Rivers
- Abstract
Riparian buffers are of major concern for land and water resource managers despite their relatively low spatial coverage. In Europe, this concern has been acknowledged by different environmental directives which recommend multi-scale monitoring (from local to regional scales). Remote sensing methods could be a cost-effective alternative to field-based monitoring, to build replicable "wall-to-wall" monitoring strategies of large river networks and associated riparian buffers. The main goal of our study is to extract and analyze various parameters of the riparian buffers of up to 12,000 km of river in southern Belgium (Wallonia) from three-dimensional (3D) point clouds based on LiDAR and photogrammetric surveys to i) map riparian buffers parameters on different scales, ii) interpret the regional patterns of the riparian buffers and iii) propose new riparian buffer management indicators. We propose different strategies to synthesize and visualize relevant information at different spatial scales ranging from local (<10 km) to regional scale (>12,000 km). Our results showed that the selected parameters had a clear regional pattern. The reaches of Ardenne ecoregion have channels with the highest flow widths and shallowest depths. In contrast, the reaches of the Loam ecoregion have the narrowest and deepest flow channels. Regional variability in channel width and depth is used to locate management units potentially affected by human impact. Riparian forest of the Loam ecoregion is characterized by the lowest longitudinal continuity and mean tree height, underlining significant human disturbance. As the availability of 3D point clouds at the regional scale is constantly growing, our study proposes reproducible methods which can be integrated into regional monitoring by land managers. With LiDAR still being relatively expensive to acquire, the use of photogrammetric point clouds combined with LiDAR data is a cost-effective means to update the characterization of the riparian forest conditions., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. How is success or failure in river restoration projects evaluated? Feedback from French restoration projects.
- Author
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Morandi B, Piégay H, Lamouroux N, and Vaudor L
- Subjects
- France, Pilot Projects, Environmental Restoration and Remediation, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Rivers
- Abstract
Since the 1990s, French operational managers and scientists have been involved in the environmental restoration of rivers. The European Water Framework Directive (2000) highlights the need for feedback from restoration projects and for evidence-based evaluation of success. Based on 44 French pilot projects that included such an evaluation, the present study includes: 1) an introduction to restoration projects based on their general characteristics 2) a description of evaluation strategies and authorities in charge of their implementation, and 3) a focus on the evaluation of results and the links between these results and evaluation strategies. The results show that: 1) the quality of an evaluation strategy often remains too poor to understand well the link between a restoration project and ecological changes; 2) in many cases, the conclusions drawn are contradictory, making it difficult to determine the success or failure of a restoration project; and 3) the projects with the poorest evaluation strategies generally have the most positive conclusions about the effects of restoration. Recommendations are that evaluation strategies should be designed early in the project planning process and be based on clearly-defined objectives., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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7. Does human perception of wetland aesthetics and healthiness relate to ecological functioning?
- Author
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Cottet M, Piégay H, and Bornette G
- Subjects
- Emotions, Expert Testimony, France, Humans, Recreation, Surveys and Questionnaires, Ecosystem, Esthetics, Public Opinion, Wetlands
- Abstract
Wetland management usually aims at preserving or restoring desirable ecological characteristics or functions. It is now well-recognized that some social criteria should also be included. Involving lay-people in wetland preservation or restoration projects may mean broadening project objectives to fit various and potentially competing requirements that relate to ecology, aesthetics, recreation, etc. In addition, perceived value depends both upon expertise and objectives, both of which vary from one stakeholder population to another. Perceived value and ecological functioning have to be reconciled in order to make a project successful. Understanding the perceptions of lay-people as well as their opinions about ecological value is a critical part of the development of sustainable management plans. Characterizing the environment in a way that adequately describes ecological function while also being consistent with lay perception may help reach such objectives. This goal has been addressed in a case study relating to wetlands of the Ain River (France). A photo-questionnaire presenting a sample of photographs of riverine wetlands distributed along the Ain River was submitted to 403 lay-people and self-identified experts. Two objectives were defined: (1) to identify the different parameters, whether visual or ecological, influencing the perception regarding the value of these ecosystems; (2) to compare the perceptions of self-identified experts and lay-people. Four criteria appear to strongly influence peoples' perceptions of ecological and aesthetical values: water transparency and colour, the presence and appearance of aquatic vegetation, the presence of sediments, and finally, trophic status. In our study, we observed only a few differences in perception. The differences primarily related to the value assigned to oligotrophic wetlands but even here, the differences between lay and expert populations were minimal. These results support the idea that it is possible to implement an integrated and participative management program for ecosystems. Our approach can provide a shared view of environmental value facilitating the work of managers in defining comprehensive goals for wetland preservation or restoration projects., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Perception of braided river landscapes: implications for public participation and sustainable management.
- Author
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Le Lay YF, Piégay H, and Rivière-Honegger A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Italy, Rivers, Attitude, Conservation of Natural Resources, Environment
- Abstract
Over the past century, the ecologically-diverse, braided Magra River in Italy has narrowed, incised, and lost many gravel bars due to the riparian vegetation encroachment following the decrease in bedload supply and channel degradation. Motivated by the European Water Framework Directive, river scientists and managers are beginning to plan projects to conserve and restore these dynamic mosaics of rare habitats and processes. To support this objective, a study was conducted to assess how braided rivers are perceived by different social groups in the area. In June, 2006, 127 people were surveyed using a photo-questionnaire consisting of ten photographs that depicted riverscapes with different proportions of water, vegetation, and bed material. Respondents were asked to score each photograph in terms of aesthetic value, beneficial uses, and river management needs. Results showed that the photographs depicting gravel bars were perceived as less aesthetically pleasing, so therefore they need an active management. However, these perceptions differed amongst groups of participants, reflecting their interests and objectives. This paper identifies a distance between scientific and popular attitudes and discusses implications for public participation, support for braided river restoration policy, and environmental education., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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