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Book Challenges Perception of Vast Demise of SW
Riparian Wetlands
The Ribbon of Green: Change in Riparian Vegetation in the Southwestern
United States
Robert H. Webb, Stanley A. Leake and Raymond M. Turner. University
of Arizona Press, $75 cloth. For information about ordering check: www.uapress.arizona.edu
The loss of riparian areas in the Southwest after
years of human settlement is generally figured to be great, with the loss
variously reported from 80 to 95 percent. These figures often appear in
the news media and popular and scientific literature and underlie various
laws and regional management plans.
A recently published book, “The Ribbon of Green: Change in Riparian
Vegetation in the Southwestern United States,” looks at long-term
changes in woody regional riparian areas and questions the occurrence
of a precipitous riparian loss. The authors identify a paper they believe
was the source for the 90 percent figure that got widely circulated.
In their study, the authors, hydrologists Robert H. Webb and Stanley A.
Leake and botanist Raymond M. Turner, focus on a geographic area that
includes the major river valleys in parts of Utah, southern Nevada, and
southeastern California as well as all of Arizona below above 5,000 feet
in elevation.
Repeat photography combined with a review of historical context and information
on species composition enabled the researchers to document the condition
of riparian vegetation during the last 140 years in the Southwest, a time
period ranging from the first use of the camera to the present. The authors
studied about a dozen woody species and various herbaceous perennials
visible in photographs. To evaluate spatial changes the authors analyzed
aerial photography or satellite images available in the last quarter of
the twentieth century.
Changes observed in thousands of repeat images were interpreted along
with surface water and groundwater hydrologic data, previous periods of
climatic variation, land uses and flow regulation, and water usage. In
examining the factors affecting the stability of woody riparian vegetation,
the authors considered the diversion of surface water, flood control and
the excessive pumping of groundwater.
The authors challenge the popular assumption about the vast decline of
Southwest riparian wetlands. They make the case that rather than a 80
or 90 percent loss, wetland vegetation has actually increased on many
river stretches in the region. This has been due to flood control, favorable
climatic conditions and large winter floods that have encouraged ecosystem
disturbance, germination, and the establishment of species in newly generated
openings.
The authors consider various perceptions that have guided researchers’
views of long-term change in the region’s rivers. They acknowledge
that some scientists perceive humans as ultimately causing regional change,
a view prompting them to interpret all changes as bad. Others scientists
give more weight to climatic fluctuations as a major influence on rivers
of the region. The authors consider that both perceptions are parts of
the truth with local effects an added complexity.
The book’s contribution to the ecological study of wetlands is the
broadening of our understanding of change in riparian ecosystems. This
in turn will affect riparian restoration strategies.

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