| Melvin R. George, Royce E. Larsen, Neil K. McDougald Kenneth W. Tate, John D. Gerlach, Jr., and Kenneth O. Fulgham |
| Authors are Rangeland Management Specialist, University of California Cooperative Extension, Department of Agronomy and Range Science, University of California, One Shields Ave., Davis, Calif. 95616; Watershed and Natural Resources Advisor, University of California Cooperative Extension, 2156 Sierra Way Suite C, San Luis Obispo, Calif. 93401; Livestock and Natural Resources Advisor, University of California Cooperative Extension, 328 Madera Ave., Madera, Calif. 93637; Rangeland Watershed Specialist, and Post-Graduate Researcher, respectively, University of California Cooperative Extension, Department of Agronomy and Range Science, University of California, One Shields Ave., Davis, Calif. 95616; and Professor, Rangeland Resources, Humboldt State University, NRS Bldg., Rm 200, Arcata, Calif. 95521. |
Abstract |
| Alteration of stream channel morphology by cattle and associated streambank erosion is a concern on rangeland watersheds. The objective of this study was to determine changes in stream channel morphology in response to 5 grazing treatments applied to 0.4 ha pastures and replicated on 3 intermittent streams at the San Joaquin Experimental Range in the central Sierra Nevada foothills of California. Baseline stream channel morphology parameters were determined along 10 transects in each pasture in June 1994. Seasonal grazing treatments (no grazing, wet season moderate, wet season concentrated, dry season moderate, and dry season concentrated) were repeated annually over 4 years beginning in July 1994. Stream channel morphology parameters were measured annually from 1995–1998. When stream morphological responses were averaged across years, there were no detectable effects of grazing on the parameters measured. Year effects and their interaction with grazing were significant, primarily for stream morphological parameters that included channel depth in their measurement or calculation. Channel depth increased significantly in the ungrazed controls, but did not change due to any grazing treatment. These results indicate that grazing had little effect on the morphology of these bedrock limited, intermittent stream channels. |
| Key Words: grazing effects, streambank erosion, sediment, annual rangelands, California |