GSTDTAP
项目编号1659929
Collaborative Research: Near-bed flow, turbulence, and emergent hydrodynamics of biologically-conditioned labile river channels
Caryn Vaughn
主持机构University of Oklahoma Norman Campus
项目开始年2017
2017-03-01
项目结束日期2020-02-29
资助机构US-NSF
项目类别Standard Grant
项目经费36645(USD)
国家美国
语种英语
英文摘要This proposed research is designed to examine how flow and sediment transport processes in rivers interact with freshwater mussels (Unionidae) burrowed into the river's bed. Freshwater mussels are one of the most threatened aquatic organisms in North America, and much work has been conducted to understand and conserve them. It is hypothesized here that freshwater mussels can survive for relatively long time periods (up to several decades) at a given river location even during high flow events with much sediment in motion. To do this, mussels may have special adaptations that enable them to remain in place on a river bed during high flow stages. Field surveys, numerical modeling, and experimental facilities will demonstrate that mussels on river beds can remain in place for relatively long time periods, to show that the forces required to move mussels out of their burrows are higher than expected values, and to illustrate that mussels can alter the flow within a river to aid in their long-term survival. This work seeks to provide critical information on those processes that enable mussels to thrive in rivers, which then could be used to aid conservation efforts. Graduate and undergraduate students will be trained in field, experimental, and numerical methods employed in rivers and aquatic ecology, providing them the necessary skills for their future careers. Lastly, an innovative interdisciplinary research team will be assembled to advance the fundamental understanding of how aquatic organisms interact with river flow.

Freshwater mussels (Unionidae) are one of the most imperiled aquatic organisms in North American rivers and much effort has been expended to understand their precipitous decline. The current paradigm is that the relative stability (immobility) of river beds over long time periods (decades) is a critical component to the ecological success and resiliency of mussels. Yet such information is in stark contrast to the central understanding of self-formed rivers. This research program is designed to examine the fundamental interactions between near-bed turbulent flow and sediment transport within sand- and gravel-bedded rivers with labile beds populated by benthic organisms. The focus for this study is an imperiled freshwater mussel, which can be considered an "ecologic engineer." It is hypothesized that (1) benthic organisms like freshwater mussels can thrive for relatively long time periods (ca. decades) at-a-station in dynamic, self-made river systems with labile channel beds, and that these same reaches often experience channel-forming discharges, (2) entrainment thresholds for selected live benthic organisms in labile river beds are measurably greater than fully-equivalent non-cohesive sediment particles due to biophysical adaptations (ecological engineering), and (3) the constructive interference of near-bed flow, turbulence, roughness, and ecological engineering adaptations create a hydrodynamic emergent phenomenon, a "tipping-point," that increases the stability of labile river beds at relatively high flow stages. First, field surveys and numerical modeling will be employed at selected reaches of two streams with historically- and ecologically-significant mussel populations to demonstrate unequivocally the persistence of mussel beds in labile river channels. Second, laboratory experiments, also supported by numerical modeling, will directly measure the lift and drag forces acting on burrowed mussels, with and without active filtering, to assess entrainment thresholds and near-bed hydrodynamics. Third, a combined experimental and numerical modeling campaign will quantify the emergence of a hydrodynamic "tipping-point" wherein the fluid drag acting on a mussel-covered bed becomes reduced through the constructive interference of variable boundary conditions. This work seeks to demonstrate that evolutionary adaptations promote hydrodynamic conditions beneficial to the persistence and survival of mussels in rivers.
来源学科分类Geosciences - Earth Sciences
文献类型项目
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/70807
专题环境与发展全球科技态势
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Caryn Vaughn.Collaborative Research: Near-bed flow, turbulence, and emergent hydrodynamics of biologically-conditioned labile river channels.2017.
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