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How natural are Alpine mountain rivers? Evidence from the Italian Alps

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TLDR
In this paper, a summary of published as well as unpublished works on historical channel adjustments in rivers of the Italian Alps is presented in order to document the impacts deriving from human pressure at different basin scales and for different river morphologies.
Abstract
Historical, human-induced channel adjustments in lowland gravel-bed rivers have been documented in several geographical contexts worldwide. In particular, it is now widely accepted that the vast majority of European rivers are far from any natural, reference state prior to anthropic disturbances, and a ‘complete’ restoration is hardly achievable. However, few investigations have addressed changes that have occurred in mountain rivers of the Alps, and these channels are commonly reckoned quite ‘natural’ by society. This paper intends to describe how human pressure on Italian Alpine basins has been quite relevant for several centuries – in terms of land-use variations, in-channel structures, timber transport (splash damming) and riparian vegetation management – such that nowadays ‘reference conditions’ cannot be found even in small mountain creeks. In addition, recent natural climatic variations (e.g. the Little Ice Age) are superimposed on human disturbances, thus defying the definition of any ‘equilibrium’ morphological conditions even under ‘human-free’ states. A summary of published as well as unpublished works on historical channel adjustments in rivers of the Italian Alps is presented in order to document the impacts deriving from human pressure at different basin scales and for different river morphologies, from steep confined streams to large unconfined rivers. General options for river management and restoration actions aiming to combine geomorphological functionality and flood hazard mitigation are discussed, in the light of the current European legislative context. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A method for the assessment and analysis of the hydromorphological condition of Italian streams: The Morphological Quality Index (MQI)

TL;DR: In this article, a new index for the hydromorphological assessment of Italian rivers has been developed for the EU Water Framework Directive requirements, but its use can be extended to other applications in river management.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural vs anthropogenic streams in Europe: History, ecology and implications for restoration, river-rewilding and riverine ecosystem services

TL;DR: In this paper, the long-term trajectories of the European floodplain system from sediment-based dating to sedaDNA have been examined, showing that early Holocene streams were predominantly multi-channel (anabranching) systems, often choked with vegetation and relatively rarely single-channel actively meandering systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Legacy effects on sediments in river corridors

TL;DR: Legacy effects on river sediments are those which alter the location and volume of sediments and/or presence of contaminants within the sediments as a result of human activities as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Floodplains and wood

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the literature on floodplains and wood in the temperate zone is presented, showing that most, if not all, of the channels and floodplain within forested catchments in this region have much greater wood loads than do heavily modified contemporary catchments.
References
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Directive 2000/60/EC of the European Parliament and of The Council of 23 October 2000 establishing a Framework for Community Action in the Field of Water Policy (Water Framework Directive)

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TL;DR: The declaration of the Ministerial Seminar on groundwater held at The Hague in 1991 recognised the need for action to avoid long-term deterioration of freshwater quality and quantity and called for a programme of actions to be implemented by the year 2000 aiming at sustainable management and protection of freshwater resources as discussed by the authors.
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The fluvial system

Journal ArticleDOI

The Pristine Myth: The Landscape of the Americas in 1492

TL;DR: In the early sixteenth century, the Native American landscape was a humanized landscape almost everywhere as mentioned in this paper, where forests had been modified, grasslands had been created, wild-life disrupted, and erosion was severe in places.

Little Ice Age

TL;DR: The Neoglacial period as discussed by the authors is the most extensive recent period of mountain glacier expansion and is conventionally defined as the 16th-mid 19th century period during which European climate was most strongly impacted.
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