September-October 2000

Interview: Streambank Solutions

Edward Perry, Ph.D., speaks on hard-armoring techniques and bioengineering.

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By Janice Kaspersen

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Within the past decade increased demands have been placed on the Army Corps of Engineers and the Natural Resources Conservation Service by environmental agencies and conservative organizations to incorporate vegetation into their streambank protection projects rather than to rely completely on traditional methods. Hard armor such as rock revetment and concrete bulkheads are considered by many to have little value for fisheries, wildlife, water quality, and aesthetic appeal. Softer solutions, such as bioengineering, which utilize living and nonliving plants, sometimes in combination with other construction materials, are being given preference (and sometimes required) as streambank protection methods. Regardless of the type of streambank protection used, there are general requirements that will always apply. Toe protection and control of streambed degradation are a necessary prerequisite to streambank protection, and the upstream and downstream ends of the revetment must be protected to prevent flanking.

EC: What are the most prevalent - and acceptable - uses of hard armoring today? How do they differ from past uses?

Perry: Soft armoring preceded hard armoring. As far back as the Middle Ages, streambanks were protected by the use of plants and plant materials such as logs. Many of the methods used were forgotten, only to be rediscovered during the last century. In today's way of thinking, hard armoring is the option of last resort and is to be used when soft armoring is either inadequate or inappropriate, as discussed in the handbook by Schiechtl and Stern, Water Bioengineering Techniques: For Watercourse, Bank and Shoreline Protection. (Author's note: The sidebar contains a list of books and reports mentioned in this article.)

Hard-armor log crib and gabion deflector solution
An example of hard-armor (log crib and gabion deflector) solution.

Detailed information on hard armoring is contained in a recently completed Corps of Engineers manual, The WES Stream Investigation and Streambank Stabilization Handbook, which covers fluvial geomorphology; general principles of erosion protection; design, construction, and maintenance of hard streambank protection; river training structures; grade-control structures; and bioengineering for streambank protection.

EC: What are the most effective alternatives to hard armoring?

Perry: Soft armoring is the alternative to hard armoring, discounting relocation of the endangered structure or relocation of the channel. When combined with hard armoring, soft armoring provides environmental attractions often at lower cost. Bioengineering streambank protection is covered in the previously mentioned book by Schiechtl and Stern and in several Corps of Engineers and US Department of Agriculture publications.

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With bioengineering, the entire streambank is treated to furnish an array of plants to provide ground cover and root penetration for erosion protection, wildlife habitat, and water-quality improvement by providing shade and cover for fish. Bioengineering is accomplished by creating zones to place plant material at various elevations on the bank based on the plants' ability to tolerate certain frequencies and durations of flooding and their attributes of dissipating current velocities and wave energies.

The toe zone - the portion of bank between the streambed and average normal river stage - is a zone of high stress, which can be undercut by currents and is often flooded greater than six months of the year. This zone would be treated by some hard material such as rock revetment, gabions, log revetment, or a combination of materials. The splash zone - the portion of bank between average normal river stage and high-water stage - is subject to wave wash, currents, ice and debris, wet-dry cycles, and freezing-thawing cycles and subject to daily water fluctuations and periods of flooding. Herbaceous emergent aquatic plants, such as reeds, rushes, and sedges, are often used in the form of a coir fiber or geotextile roll, brush mattress and wattling, vegetative geogrid, or dormant cuttings in the splash zone, provided the silt load of the stream will not suffocate the plants. The bank zone - the portion of bank above normal high-water level - is exposed periodically to wave wash, currents, ice and debris, and traffic by animals or man. Both herbaceous and woody plants, which are flood tolerant and able to withstand submergence for up to eight weeks, are used in the bank zone in the form of contour wattling or brush layering. The terrace zone - the portion of bank inland from the bank zone - is subject to overbank flooding. Flood-tolerant trees with deeply penetrating roots and shade-tolerant native grasses, herbs, and shrubs are used in the terrace zone. Next Page >

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