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Hauer et al. 1999
Large woody debris in bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) spawning streams of logged and wilderness watersheds in northwest Montana.  F.R. Hauer, G.C. Poole, J.T. Gangemi, and C.V. Baxter. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science. 56: 915-924. 1999.

We measured large woody debris (LWD) in 20 known bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) spawning stream reaches from logged and wilderness watersheds in northwestern Montana.  Mean bankfull width of stream reaches was 14.1 m, ranging from 3.9 to 36.7 m.  Streams were large enough to move LWD and form aggregates.  We determined the characteristics of individual pieces of LWD that were interactive with the stream channel.  Large, short pieces of LWD attached to the stream bank were the most likely to be positioned perpendicular to stream flow, while large long pieces either tended to be parallel to the flow or, when attached, were most apt to extend across the channel thalweg.  Observations indicated that the majority of pools were formed as scour pools by either very large LWD pieces that were perpendicular to the stream or multipiece LWD aggregates.  Among reaches in wilderness watersheds, ratios of large to small LWD, attached to unattached LWD, and LWD with and without root wads were relatively consistent.  However, among reaches with logging in the watershed, these ratios varied substantially.  These results suggest that logging can alter the complex balance of delivery, storage, and transport of LWD in northern Rocky Mountain streams, and therefore, likely results in substantive change in stream habitats.
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