Published: 2013-12-31

The impact of hydrotechnical facilities on island avifauna: a case study of the middle Vistula River

Dariusz Bukaciński , Monika Bukacińska , Arkadiusz Burzyński
Studia Ecologiae et Bioethicae
Section: Articles
https://doi.org/10.21697/seb.2013.11.4.07

Abstract

The study was conducted in the years 1994-2006 in the middle of the Vistula River between Wróble and Kochów (416th – 418th km of the waterway). The presence of islands and steep banks makes it a key place for nesting avifauna, including a number of endangered species. The aim of this paper is to present the impact of hydro-technical facilities (a diversion weir) on habitat changes, and consequently on the abundance and distribution of birds that inhabit this part of the river. A cross-divider in the riverbed (weir) connecting the bank of the river with one of the islands increased the flow rate and pushed the current to the middle of the river, directing it towards the islands. The result of these changes was a sudden erosion of the sandy, the high slope at the top of the island II, a partition of this island into two parts, and a slow erosion of the island located near the left bank (island IV, Fig. 1B). Lack of fixed, steady flow along the right bank resulted also in a considerably faster succession of vegetation on the island I and slow shallowing of the channel between the island and the bank. As a result, the area of sandy habitats, most valuable to nesting birds, decreased disproportionately faster than the area of the whole islands (Table 1). In the years 2001-2002, when the island I was completely united with the right bank and the islands 0 and I were connected to each other, a width of the riverbed at this point decreased from 870 m to 710 m, i.e. by more than 20 % (Fig. 1).

Keywords:

middle Vistula River, riverine birds, river conservation, efects of hydrotechnical facilities, islands and shoals

Download files

Citation rules

Bukaciński, D., Bukacińska, M., & Burzyński, A. (2013). The impact of hydrotechnical facilities on island avifauna: a case study of the middle Vistula River. Studia Ecologiae Et Bioethicae, 11(4), 93–109. https://doi.org/10.21697/seb.2013.11.4.07

Cited by / Share


This website uses cookies for proper operation, in order to use the portal fully you must accept cookies.