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Freshwater Biodiversity Toolbox

Habitat Creation – Addition of Woody Debris to Lotic Systems

The addition of woody debris to inland aquatic habitats is one rehabilitation effort in watersheds impacted by human activity. Artificially constructed wooden structures or the recruitment of natural wood material is thought to improve in stream conditions for fish and other aquatic organisms. Woody debris can improve freshwater habitats as its placement creates habitat heterogeneity and complexity, forming pools and rivers that may return channel hydromorphology to pre-disturbance conditions. Woody debris also creates microhabitats of cooler water and instream cover/refugia for aquatic organisms. This intervention reviews the addition of woody debris in lotic habitats (e.g., moving water such as river and streams). The following syntheses cover case studies, techniques, and project planning and monitoring.

Rating:
There was a mix of CEESAT scores for this intervention; 15 syntheses scored Red or Amber in each element demonstrating limitations in the rigour and the transparency in which these reviews were conducted (i.e., no a-priori protocol, critical appraisal, or search strategy provided). Six syntheses demonstrated Green in at least 1 element. Sievers et al. (2017) and Stewart et al. (2006) scored Green in multiple elements and demonstrated Gold ratings in their search strategy. Taylor et al. (2019) is a detailed and systematic synthesis, demonstrating rigour in their review conduct by scoring Gold or Green in every CEESAT element. The majority of syntheses scored very strongly in all RASCAT criteria. About half of the syntheses reviewed were not published recently, and many did not demonstrate consideration of implications, practical advice, or recommendations for decision-makers.

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