Predicted channel types - Potential for Habitat Improvement in the Columbia River Basin
Data Set (DS) | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC)GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:20560 | Updated: August 9, 2022 | Published / External
Item Identification
Title: | Predicted channel types - Potential for Habitat Improvement in the Columbia River Basin |
---|---|
Short Name: | Predicted channel types (Potential for Habitat Improvement in the Columbia River Basin) |
Status: | Completed |
Creation Date: | 2008-09-01 |
Publication Date: | 2016-12-13 |
Abstract: |
Basin-wide analysis of potential to improve tributary habitats in the Columbia River basin through restoration of habitat-forming processes. Identification of geomorphological target conditions for river restoration is typically based on locally measured reference conditions, yet few reference sites remain in much of the 630,000 km2 Columbia River Basin, USA. Therefore, we predict reference conditions throughout the basin based on key reach-scale variables, which we empirically derived from a limited number of reference sites. Our typology predicts channel type based primarily on channel slope in confined reaches (floodplain width less than 4 times the bankful channel width) and on slope, drainage area, precipitation, and relative transport capacity in unconfined reaches (floodplain width greater than 4 times channel width). Channel types are cascade, step-pool, plane-bed, and pool-riffle in confined reaches, and braided, island-braided, meandering, and straight in unconfined reaches. Accuracy of channel type prediction in confined reaches is generally high compared to prediction accuracy in unconfined reaches. Lower accuracy in the unconfined reaches is largely due to vertical accuracy of the 10- m digital elevation model (DEM), which is insufficient to accurately estimate channel slope in low relief areas. However, lack of sediment supply information also limits our ability to predict floodplain channel type accurately. Therefore, we evaluate the effect of incorporating an estimate of relative transport capacity to help separate single thread channels (straight and meandering) from multi-thread channels (braided and island-braided) and increase prediction accuracy. Finally, we use existing ecoregion maps to show how channel type distributions vary among geologic regions, and suggest analysis options for mapping reference condition across large river basins. We also attempted to develop a GIS data set that depicts pre-settlement riparian vegetation in the Columbia River Basin to guide stream restoration for endangered salmon. To do this, we first created a data layer of historic riparian vegetation information from survey notes that were taken mid 19th to early 20th century during the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) conducted by General Land Office (GLO). Our reconstructed riparian vegetation data included randomly sampled basin-wide data (drainage area 200,000 km2), as well as intensively reconstructed watershed-level data (3,000 km2). Our modeled output was too inaccurate to be useful. GIS hydrography layer with multiple stream attributes. |
Purpose: |
Addresses Legal Mandate Model results |
Notes: |
Loaded by FGDC Metadata Uploader, batch 4686, 09-05-2013 16:19 |
Supplemental Information: |
Subject to Public Access to Research Results (PARR): Yes |
Keywords
Theme Keywords
Thesaurus | Keyword |
---|---|
UNCONTROLLED | |
None | Columbia River |
None | habitat |
None | restoration |
Spatial Keywords
Thesaurus | Keyword |
---|---|
UNCONTROLLED | |
None | Columbia River Basin |
Instrument Keywords
Thesaurus | Keyword |
---|---|
UNCONTROLLED | |
None | Instrument Not Applicable |
Physical Location
Organization: | Northwest Fisheries Science Center |
---|---|
City: | Seattle |
State/Province: | WA |
Country: | USA |
Data Set Information
Data Set Scope Code: | Data Set |
---|---|
Data Set Type: | GIS |
Data Presentation Form: | Table (digital) |
Support Roles
Data Steward
Date Effective From: | 2015-10-01 |
---|---|
Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Person): | Beechie, Tim |
Address: |
2725 Montlake Boulevard East Seattle, WA 98112 |
Email Address: | Tim.Beechie@noaa.gov |
Phone: | 206-860-3409 |
Distributor
Date Effective From: | 2015-10-01 |
---|---|
Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Organization): | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) |
Address: |
2725 Montlake Boulevard East Seattle, WA 98112 USA |
Email Address: | nmfs.nwfsc.metadata@noaa.gov |
Phone: | 206-860-3200 |
URL: | NWFSC Home |
Metadata Contact
Date Effective From: | 2015-10-01 |
---|---|
Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Organization): | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) |
Address: |
2725 Montlake Boulevard East Seattle, WA 98112 USA |
Email Address: | nmfs.nwfsc.metadata@noaa.gov |
Phone: | 206-860-3200 |
URL: | NWFSC Home |
Originator
Date Effective From: | 2015-10-01 |
---|---|
Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Person): | Beechie, Tim |
Address: |
2725 Montlake Boulevard East Seattle, WA 98112 |
Email Address: | Tim.Beechie@noaa.gov |
Phone: | 206-860-3409 |
Point of Contact
Date Effective From: | 2015-10-01 |
---|---|
Date Effective To: | |
Contact (Person): | Beechie, Tim |
Address: |
2725 Montlake Boulevard East Seattle, WA 98112 |
Email Address: | Tim.Beechie@noaa.gov |
Phone: | 206-860-3409 |
Extents
Extent Group 1
Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 1
W° Bound: | -122.3062 | |
---|---|---|
E° Bound: | -122.3062 | |
N° Bound: | 47.6449 | |
S° Bound: | 47.6449 | |
Description |
Columbia River Basin: The Columbia River Basin is the fourth largest watershed in the United States - it includes area in 7 states (Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Wyoming, and Utah) and one Canadian province. |
Extent Group 1 / Time Frame 1
Time Frame Type: | Range |
---|---|
Start: | 2010-01-01 |
End: | 2014-01-07 |
Access Information
Security Class: | Unclassified |
---|---|
Data Access Procedure: |
At this time, contact the Data Manager for information on obtaining access to this data set. In the near future, the NWFSC will strive to provide all non-sensitive data resources as a web service in order to meet the NOAA Data Access Policy Directive (https://nosc.noaa.gov/EDMC/PD.DA.php). |
Data Access Constraints: |
NA |
Distribution Information
Distribution 1
Start Date: | 2016-12-13 |
---|---|
End Date: | Present |
Download URL: | https://www.webapps.nwfsc.noaa.gov/apex/parr/columbia_basin_rivers_over_8_meters_bankfull_width/data/page/ |
Distributor: | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) (2015-10-01 - Present) |
File Name: | Columbia Basin Rivers Over 8 Meters Bankfull Width |
Description: |
This layer portrays predicted channel patterns for large rivers (>8m bankfull width) in the Columbia River basin. The channel patterns include confined reaches (floodplain width <4 times bankfull width), and the four common channel patterns described in Beechie et al. (2006), braided, island-braided, meandering, and straight. Predictions are based on a support vector machine model described in Beechie and Imaki (2014). |
Distribution 2
Start Date: | 2016-12-13 |
---|---|
End Date: | Present |
Download URL: | https://www.webapps.nwfsc.noaa.gov/apex/parrdata/inventory/tables/table/columbia_basin_rivers_over_8_meters_bankfull_width |
Distributor: | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) (2015-10-01 - Present) |
File Name: | Columbia Basin Rivers Over 8 Meters Bankfull Width |
Description: |
This layer portrays predicted channel patterns for large rivers (>8m bankfull width) in the Columbia River basin. The channel patterns include confined reaches (floodplain width <4 times bankfull width), and the four common channel patterns described in Beechie et al. (2006), braided, island-braided, meandering, and straight. Predictions are based on a support vector machine model described in Beechie and Imaki (2014). |
Distribution 3
Start Date: | 2016-12-13 |
---|---|
End Date: | Present |
Download URL: | https://www.webapps.nwfsc.noaa.gov/server/rest/services/Hosted/Columbia_River_Basin_Predicted_Channel_Patterns_for_Large_rivers/FeatureServer/0 |
Distributor: | Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) (2015-10-01 - Present) |
File Name: | Columbia Basin Rivers Over 8 Meters Bankfull Width |
Description: |
This layer portrays predicted channel patterns for large rivers (>8m bankfull width) in the Columbia River basin. The channel patterns include confined reaches (floodplain width <4 times bankfull width), and the four common channel patterns described in Beechie et al. (2006), braided, island-braided, meandering, and straight. Predictions are based on a support vector machine model described in Beechie and Imaki (2014). |
URLs
URL 1
URL: | https://www.webapps.nwfsc.noaa.gov/apex/parrdata/inventory/datasets/dataset/3672 |
---|---|
Name: | Predicted channel types |
URL Type: |
Online Resource
|
File Resource Format: | Web site |
Description: |
NWFSC Dataset Information page. GIS hydrography layer with multiple stream attributes |
Technical Environment
Description: |
GIS |
---|
Data Quality
Accuracy: |
Medium |
---|---|
Quality Control Procedures Employed: |
These data were collected and processed in accordance with established protocols and best practices under the direction of the project’s Principal Investigator. Contact the dataset Data Manager in section 3 for full QA/QC methodology. |
Data Management
Have Resources for Management of these Data Been Identified?: | Yes |
---|---|
Approximate Percentage of Budget for these Data Devoted to Data Management: | 5 |
Do these Data Comply with the Data Access Directive?: | Yes |
Is Access to the Data Limited Based on an Approved Waiver?: | No |
If Distributor (Data Hosting Service) is Needed, Please Indicate: | No |
Approximate Delay Between Data Collection and Dissemination: | 0 days |
If Delay is Longer than Latency of Automated Processing, Indicate Under What Authority Data Access is Delayed: |
No Delay |
Actual or Planned Long-Term Data Archive Location: | NCEI-MD |
Approximate Delay Between Data Collection and Archiving: | 365 |
How Will the Data Be Protected from Accidental or Malicious Modification or Deletion Prior to Receipt by the Archive?: |
The Northwest Fisheries Science Center facilitates backup and recovery of all data and IT components which are managed by IT Operations through the capture of static (point-in-time) backup data to physical media. Once data is captured to physical media (every 1-3 days), a duplicate is made and routinely (weekly) transported to an offsite archive facility where it is maintained throughout the data's applicable life-cycle. |
Lineage
Lineage Statement: |
Multiple GIS processes to assign stream reach attributes; SVM model to classify stream reach types. |
---|
Child Items
Rubric scores updated every 15m
Type | Title |
---|---|
Entity | Columbia Basin Rivers Over 8 Meters Bankfull Width |
Catalog Details
Catalog Item ID: | 20560 |
---|---|
GUID: | gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:20560 |
Metadata Record Created By: | Robert Marsicek |
Metadata Record Created: | 2013-09-05 16:19+0000 |
Metadata Record Last Modified By: | SysAdmin InPortAdmin |
Metadata Record Last Modified: | 2022-08-09 17:11+0000 |
Metadata Record Published: | 2019-06-04 |
Owner Org: | NWFSC |
Metadata Publication Status: | Published Externally |
Do Not Publish?: | N |
Metadata Last Review Date: | 2019-06-04 |
Metadata Review Frequency: | 1 Year |
Metadata Next Review Date: | 2020-06-04 |