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Dive into the research topics where Amy E. East is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy E. East.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Dam removal: Listening in

Melissa M. Foley; James Bellmore; Jim E. O'Connor; Jeffrey J. Duda; Amy E. East; Gordon Grant; Chauncey W. Anderson; Jennifer A. Bountry; Mathias J. Collins; Patrick J. Connolly; Laura S. Craig; James E. Evans; Samantha L. Greene; Francis J. Magilligan; Christopher S. Magirl; Jon J. Major; George R. Pess; Timothy J. Randle; Patrick B. Shafroth; Christian E. Torgersen; Desiree Tullos; Andrew C. Wilcox

Dam removal is widely used as an approach for river restoration in the United States. The increase in dam removals—particularly large dams—and associated dam-removal studies over the last few decades motivated a working group at the USGS John Wesley Powell Center for Analysis and Synthesis to review and synthesize available studies of dam removals and their findings. Based on dam removals thus far, some general conclusions have emerged: (1) physical responses are typically fast, with the rate of sediment erosion largely dependent on sediment characteristics and dam-removal strategy; (2) ecological responses to dam removal differ among the affected upstream, downstream, and reservoir reaches; (3) dam removal tends to quickly reestablish connectivity, restoring the movement of material and organisms between upstream and downstream river reaches; (4) geographic context, river history, and land use significantly influence river restoration trajectories and recovery potential because they control broader physical and ecological processes and conditions; and (5) quantitative modeling capability is improving, particularly for physical and broad-scale ecological effects, and gives managers information needed to understand and predict long-term effects of dam removal on riverine ecosystems. Although these studies collectively enhance our understanding of how riverine ecosystems respond to dam removal, knowledge gaps remain because most studies have been short (< 5 years) and do not adequately represent the diversity of dam types, watershed conditions, and dam-removal methods in the U.S.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2017

Channel-planform evolution in four rivers of Olympic National Park, Washington, USA: the roles of physical drivers and trophic cascades

Amy E. East; Kurt J. Jenkins; Patricia J. Happe; Jennifer A. Bountry; Timothy J. Beechie; Mark C. Mastin; Joel B. Sankey; Timothy J. Randle

Identifying the relative contributions of physical and ecological processes to channel evolution remains a substantial challenge in fluvial geomorphology. We use a 74-year aerial photographic record of the Hoh, Queets, Quinault, and Elwha Rivers, Olympic National Park, Washington, USA, to investigate whether physical or trophic-cascade-driven ecological factors – excessive elk impacts after wolves were extirpated a century ago – are the dominant drivers of channel planform in these gravel-bed rivers. We find that channel width and braiding show strong relationships with recent flood history. All four rivers widened significantly after having been relatively narrow in the 1970s, consistent with increased flood activity since then. Channel planform also reflects sediment-supply changes, evident from landslide response on the Elwha River. We surmise that the Hoh River, which shows a multi-decadal trend toward greater braiding, is adjusting to increased sediment supply associated with rapid glacial retreat. These rivers demonstrate transmission of climatic signals through relatively short sediment-routing systems that lack substantial buffering by sediment storage. Legacy effects of anthropogenic modification likely also affect the Quinault River planform. We infer no correspondence between channel evolution and elk abundance, suggesting that trophic-cascade effects in this setting are subsidiary to physical controls on channel morphology. Our findings differ from previous interpretations of Olympic National Park fluvial dynamics and contrast with the classic example of Yellowstone National Park, where legacy effects of elk overuse are apparent in channel morphology; we attribute these differences to hydrologic regime and large-wood availability. Published 2016. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

A regime shift in sediment export from a coastal watershed during a record wet winter, California: Implications for landscape response to hydroclimatic extremes: Sediment flux regime shift

Amy E. East; Andrew W. Stevens; Andrew C. Ritchie; Patrick L. Barnard; Pamela Campbell-Swarzenski; Brian D. Collins; Christopher H. Conaway

Small, steep watersheds are prolific sediment sources from which sediment flux is highly sensitive to climatic changes. Storm intensity and frequency are widely expected to increase during the 21st century, and so assessing the response of small, steep watersheds to extreme rainfall is essential to understanding landscape response to climate change. During record winter rainfall in 2016–2017, the San Lorenzo River, coastal California, had nine flow peaks representing 2–10-year flood magnitudes. By the third flood, fluvial suspended sediment showed a regime shift to greater and coarser sediment supply, coincident with numerous landslides in the watershed. Even with no singular catastrophic flood, these flows exported more than half as much sediment as had a 100-year flood 35 years earlier, substantially enlarging the nearshore delta. Annual sediment load in 2017 was an order of magnitude greater than during an average-rainfall year, and 500-fold greater than in a recent drought. These anomalous sediment inputs are critical to the coastal littoral system, delivering enough sediment, sometimes over only a few days, to maintain beaches for several years. Future projections of megadroughts punctuated by major atmospheric-river storm activity suggest that interannual sediment-yield variations will become more extreme than today in the western USA, with potential consequences for coastal management, ecosystems, and water-storage capacity. The occurrence of two years with major sediment export over the past 35 years that were not associated with extremes of the El Niño Southern Oscillation or Pacific Decadal Oscillation suggests caution in interpreting climatic signals from marine sedimentary deposits derived from small, steep, coastal watersheds, to avoid misinterpreting the frequencies of those cycles. Published 2018. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal

Andrew C. Ritchie; Jonathan A. Warrick; Amy E. East; Christopher S. Magirl; Andrew W. Stevens; Jennifer A. Bountry; Timothy J. Randle; Christopher A. Curran; Robert C. Hilldale; Jeffrey J. Duda; Guy Gelfenbaum; Ian M. Miller; George R. Pess; Melissa M. Foley; Randall E. McCoy; Andrea S. Ogston

Sediment pulses can cause widespread, complex changes to rivers and coastal regions. Quantifying landscape response to sediment-supply changes is a long-standing problem in geomorphology, but the unanticipated nature of most sediment pulses rarely allows for detailed measurement of associated landscape processes and evolution. The intentional removal of two large dams on the Elwha River (Washington, USA) exposed ~30 Mt of impounded sediment to fluvial erosion, presenting a unique opportunity to quantify source-to-sink river and coastal responses to a massive sediment-source perturbation. Here we evaluate geomorphic evolution during and after the sediment pulse, presenting a 5-year sediment budget and morphodynamic analysis of the Elwha River and its delta. Approximately 65% of the sediment was eroded, of which only ~10% was deposited in the fluvial system. This restored fluvial supply of sand, gravel, and wood substantially changed the channel morphology. The remaining ~90% of the released sediment was transported to the coast, causing ~60 ha of delta growth. Although metrics of geomorphic change did not follow simple time-coherent paths, many signals peaked 1–2 years after the start of dam removal, indicating combined impulse and step-change disturbance responses.


Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment | 2018

Quantifying and forecasting changes in the areal extent of river valley sediment in response to altered hydrology and land cover

Alan Kasprak; Joel B. Sankey; Daniel D. Buscombe; Joshua Caster; Amy E. East; Paul E. Grams

In river valleys, sediment moves between active river channels, near-channel deposits including bars and floodplains, and upland environments such as terraces and aeolian dunefields. Sediment availability is a prerequisite for the sustained transfer of material between these areas, and for the eco-geomorphic functioning of river networks in general. However, the difficulty of monitoring sediment availability and movement at the reach or corridor scale has hindered our ability to quantify and forecast the response of sediment transfer to hydrologic or land cover alterations. Here we leverage spatiotemporally extensive datasets quantifying sediment areal coverage along a 28 km reach of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, southwestern USA. In concert with information on hydrologic alteration and vegetation encroachment resulting from the operation of Glen Canyon Dam (constructed in 1963) upstream of our study reach, we model the relative and combined influence of changes in (a) flow and (b) riparian vegetation extent on the areal extent of sediment available for transport in the river valley over the period from 1921 to 2016. In addition, we use projections of future streamflow and vegetation encroachment to forecast sediment availability over the 20 year period from 2016 to 2036. We find that hydrologic alteration has reduced the areal extent of bare sediment by 9% from the pre- to post-dam periods, whereas vegetation encroachment further reduced bare sediment extent by 45%. Over the next 20 years, the extent of bare sediment is forecast to be reduced by an additional 12%. Our results demonstrate the impact of river regulation, specifically the loss of annual low flows and associated vegetation encroachment, on reducing the sediment available for transfer within river valleys. This work provides an extendable framework for using high-resolution data on streamflow and land cover to assess and forecast the impact of watershed perturbation (e.g. river regulation, land cover shifts, climate change) on sediment connectivity at the corridor scale.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

River response to large-dam removal in a Mediterranean hydroclimatic setting: Carmel River, California, USA: River response to large-dam removal

Lee Harrison; Amy E. East; Douglas P. Smith; Joshua B. Logan; Rosealea M. Bond; Colin L. Nicol; Thomas H. Williams; David A. Boughton; Kaitlyn Chow; Lauren Luna

Dam removal provides a valuable opportunity to measure the fluvial response to changes in both sediment supply and the processes that shape channel morphology. We present the first study of river response to the removal of a large (32-m-high) dam in a Mediterranean hydroclimatic setting, on the Carmel River, coastal California, USA. This before-after/control-impact study measured changes in channel topography, grain size, and salmonid spawning habitat throughout dam removal and subsequent major floods. During dam removal, the river course was re-routed in order to leave most of the impounded sediment sequestered in the former reservoir and thus prevent major channel and floodplain aggradation downstream. However, a substantial sediment pulse occurred in response to base-level fall, knickpoint migration, and channel avulsion through sediment in the former reservoir above the newly re-routed channel. The sediment pulse advanced ~3.5 km in the first wet season after dam removal, resulting in decreased riverbed grain size downstream of the dam site. In the second wet season after dam removal, high flows (including a 30-year flood and two 10-year floods) transported sediment > 30 km downstream, filling pools and reducing cross-channel relief. Deposition of gravel in the second wet season after dam removal enhanced salmonid spawning habitat downstream of the dam site. We infer that in dam removals where most reservoir sediment remains impounded and where high flows follow soon after dam removal, flow sequencing becomes a more important driver of geomorphic and fish-habitat change than the dam removal alone.


Scientific Investigations Report | 2017

Modern landscape processes affecting archaeological sites along the Colorado River corridor downstream of Glen Canyon Dam, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Arizona

Amy E. East; Joel B. Sankey; Helen C. Fairley; Joshua Caster; Alan Kasprak

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Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2014

Synthesizing Studies of Dam Removal

Jim E. O'Connor; Amy E. East

Dam decommissioning is rapidly emerging as an important river restoration strategy in the United States. Hundreds of dams have been removed in the past few decades, including several large ones (>10–15 meters) impounding large sediment volumes (>106 cubic meters) in the past 3 years, notably Condit Dam and the Elwha River dams in Washington State. These removals and the associated studies provide for the first time an opportunity to evaluate the immediate and persistent consequences of these significant fluvial—and in some cases, coastal—perturbations. Understanding dam removal response not only improves understanding of landscape and ecosystem adjustment to profound sediment pulses but also provides important lessons for future watershed restoration efforts.


Geomorphology | 2015

Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: River channel and floodplain geomorphic change

Amy E. East; George R. Pess; Jennifer A. Bountry; Christopher S. Magirl; Andrew C. Ritchie; Joshua B. Logan; Timothy J. Randle; Mark C. Mastin; Justin T. Minear; Jeffrey J. Duda; Martin Liermann; Michael L. McHenry; Timothy J. Beechie; Patrick B. Shafroth


Geomorphology | 2015

Large-scale dam removal on the Elwha River, Washington, USA: source-to-sink sediment budget and synthesis

Jonathan A. Warrick; Jennifer A. Bountry; Amy E. East; Christopher S. Magirl; Timothy J. Randle; Guy Gelfenbaum; Andrew C. Ritchie; George R. Pess; Vivian Leung; Jeffrey J. Duda

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Joshua Caster

United States Geological Survey

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Jennifer A. Bountry

United States Bureau of Reclamation

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Christopher S. Magirl

United States Geological Survey

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Timothy J. Randle

United States Bureau of Reclamation

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Jeffrey J. Duda

United States Geological Survey

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Joel B. Sankey

United States Geological Survey

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Alan Kasprak

United States Geological Survey

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George R. Pess

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Helen C. Fairley

United States Geological Survey

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