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MoRPh: a citizen science tool for monitoring and appraising physical habitat changes in rivers
Author(s) -
Shuker Lucy J.,
Gurnell Angela M.,
Wharton Geraldene,
Gurnell David J.,
England Judy,
Finn Leeming Brishan F.,
Beach Ellie
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
water and environment journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.437
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1747-6593
pISSN - 1747-6585
DOI - 10.1111/wej.12259
Subject(s) - habitat , vegetation (pathology) , hydrology (agriculture) , citizen science , streams , scale (ratio) , modular design , environmental science , aggregate (composite) , geography , ecology , physical geography , geology , cartography , computer science , geotechnical engineering , computer network , botany , pathology , biology , operating system , medicine , materials science , composite material
The MoRPh survey is designed to enable citizen scientists to monitor physical habitat mosaics and human pressures within short (up to 40 m) river reaches called modules. MoRPh underpins a multiscale Modular River Survey, providing local information, which when collected across 10 contiguous modules, delivers a MultiMoRPh river sub‐reach survey up to 400 m in length. This, in turn, contributes to a HydroMoRPh assessment of reaches extending to tens of kilometres of river length, based on secondary data sources. A 6‐month trial on chalk streams, demonstrates that indices calculated from MoRPh surveys can detect notable differences in hydraulic, sediment, physical and vegetation habitat characteristics across this single river type. Further tests will evaluate applicability to other river types and ability to detect temporal changes. Development of aggregate indices for MultiMoRPh sub‐reaches will aid interpretation of contemporary morphological dynamics, complementing longer term changes extracted at the reach scale by a HydroMoRPh analysis.

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