scispace - formally typeset
J

Joanna Zawiejska

Researcher at Pedagogical University

Publications -  49
Citations -  1464

Joanna Zawiejska is an academic researcher from Pedagogical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Floodplain & Flood myth. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 48 publications receiving 1249 citations. Previous affiliations of Joanna Zawiejska include Jagiellonian University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Twentieth-century channel change on the Dunajec River, southern Poland: Patterns, causes and controls

TL;DR: In this paper, the spatial and temporal patterns of the twentieth-century channel changes of the Dunajec, the second largest river of the Polish Carpathians, are analysed using data from six historical maps, hand-auger drillings in paleochannels and hydrometric data from 10 gauging stations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental change, hydromorphological reference conditions and the restoration of Polish Carpathian rivers

Abstract: In the twentieth century Polish Carpathian rivers were considerably modified by channelization and gravel mining, with significant detrimental effects to their ecological integrity, vertical stability of the streambeds and flood hazard to downstream river reaches. Restoration of the rivers is thus necessary to improve their ecological status and re-establish geomorphic dynamic equilibrium conditions. Various approaches to defining hydromorphological reference conditions, proposed to date in river restoration literature, have serious deficiencies. In particular, environmental changes that took place in the catchments of Carpathian rivers during the twentieth century invalidate the historical state of the rivers as reference for their restoration. This is illustrated by a change from bar-braided to island-braided channel pattern that occurred in the past century in unmanaged sections of the Czarny Dunajec in response to a reduction in flow and sediment dynamics of the river. We indicate that reference conditions should be defined as those which exist or would exist under present environmental conditions in the catchment but without human influence on the channel, riparian zone and floodplain of the river which is to be restored. This assumption was tested through the evaluation of hydromorphological river quality of the Czarny Dunajec according to the European Standard EN-14614. The evaluation confirmed a high-status hydromorphological quality in an unmanaged channel section, which can thus be used as a reference for restoration of impacted river sections. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wood storage in a wide mountain river: case study of the Czarny Dunajec, Polish Carpathians

Abstract: Storage of large woody debris in the wide, mountain, Czarny Dunajec River, southern Poland, was investigated following two floods of June and July 2001 with a seven-year frequency. Within a reach, to which wood was delivered only by bank erosion and transport from upstream, wood quantities were estimated for eighty-nine, 100 m long, channel segments grouped into nine sections of similar morphology. Results from regression analysis indicated the quantity of stored wood to be directly related to the length of eroded, wooded banks and river width, and inversely related to unit stream power at the flood peak. The largest quantities of wood (up to 33 t ha−1) were stored in wide, multi-thread river sections. Here, the relatively low transporting ability of the river facilitated deposition of transported wood while a considerable length of eroded channel and island banks resulted in a large number of trees delivered from the local riparian forest. In these sections, a few morphological and ecological situations led to the accumulation of especially large quantities of wood within a small river area. Very low amounts of wood were stored in narrow, single-thread sections of regulated or bedrock channel. High stream power facilitated transport of wood through these sections while the high strength of the banks and low channel sinuosity prevented bank retreat and delivery of trees to the channel. Considerable differences in the character of deposited wood existed between wide, multi-thread channel sections located at different distances below a narrow, 7 km long, channellized reach of the river. Wood deposited close to the downstream end of the channellized reach was highly disintegrated and structured into jams, whereas further downstream well preserved shrubs and trees prevailed. This apparently reflects differences in the distance of wood transport and shows that in a mountain river wider than the height of trees growing on its banks, wood can be transported long distances along relatively narrow, single-thread reaches but is preferentially deposited in wide, multi-thread reaches. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydromorphological conditions, potential fish habitats and the fish community in a mountain river subjected to variable human impacts, the Czarny Dunajec, Polish Carpathians

TL;DR: The Czarny Dunajec River, Polish Carpathians, has been considerably modified by channelization and gravel mining-induced channel incision and it varies in morphology from a single-thread, incised or regulated channel to an unmanaged, multi-thread channel as mentioned in this paper.