Application of ecohydraulic bank protection model to improve river bank stability and biotic community in Surabaya River

Authors

  • Daru Setyo Rini Doctoral Program in Environmental Studies Postgraduate Program University of Brawijaya
  • Endang Arisoesilaningsih Department of Biology Brawijaya Universit
  • Donny Harisuseno Department of Hydraulic Engineering Brawijaya University
  • S Soemarno Department of Soil Science Brawijaya University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15243/jdmlm.2017.051.975

Keywords:

macroinvertebrates, native fish, river bank protection, riparian habitat restoration

Abstract

Ecohydraulic river bank protection design was developed as ECO-RIPRAP model and has been applied along 100 meter length to restore accelerated erosion sites in Surabaya River at Wringinanom and Klubuk. The model combined re-profiled and re-vegetated bank with rock toe reinforcement and addition of log groynes at 10 meter length interval. Various native plant species were planted on bank slopes, including water plants Ipomoea aquatica and Pistia stratiotes, grasses and shrubs Ipomoea carnea, Pluchea indica, Saccharum spontaneum, Arundo donax, and native tree species Ficus glomerata, Bambusa arundinacea, Dendrocalamus asper, Bambusa vulgaris, Ficus benjamina, Dillenia indica, Psidium guajava, Arthocarpus camansi, Arthocarpus elasticus, Hibiscus mutabilis, Nauclea sp., Inocarpus edulis, and Syzygium polyanthum. The river bank morphology after ECO-RIPRAP application showed alteration from erosion to sedimentation due to rock toe enforcement, log groynes protection, and increase of plant cover on littoral banks that decreased near bank velocity. The macro-invertebrate community shown increase of taxa richness, EPT richness, %EPT and %Atyidae, but decrease of %Chironomidae at restored sites. The fish community shown increase of taxa richness, increase of abundance by 54.2%, increase of Pangasius micronemus abundance by 25.6%, and increase of Hemibragus nemurus abundance by 6.3 % at restored reach. Rare fish species thrive back at restored area, namely Oxyeleotris marmorata, Mastacembelus unicolor and Hampala macrolepidota.

Author Biographies

Daru Setyo Rini, Doctoral Program in Environmental Studies Postgraduate Program University of Brawijaya

Doctorate student

Endang Arisoesilaningsih, Department of Biology Brawijaya Universit

Senior Lecturer

Donny Harisuseno, Department of Hydraulic Engineering Brawijaya University

Senior Lecturer

S Soemarno, Department of Soil Science Brawijaya University

Professor

References

Arisandi, P. 2012. Feasibility Study of Upstream Kali Surabaya as Fishery Sanctuary Area. Thesis. Postgraduate Program of Biology of Airlangga University (in Indonesian)

Brisbane City Council. 2000. Natural channel design guidelines. Queensland, Australia.

Brisbane City Council. 2004. Erosion Treatment for Urban Creek Guidlines. Queensland Australia, https://www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/planning-building/planning-guidelines-and-tools/technical-documents#natural.

Government Regulation No 26/2008. National Spatial Planning. Ministry of Justice and Human Rights of the Republic of Indonesia, Jakarta (in Indonesian).

Government Regulation No 38/2011. River. Ministry of Justice and Human Rights of the Republic of Indonesia, Jakarta (in Indonesian).

Hammer, O. 2016. PAST Paleontologican Statistic Version 3.12 Reference Manual 1996-2016, University of Oslo.

Lawler, D.M. 1993. The measurement of river bank erosion and lateral channel change: a review. Earth Surface Process and Landforms 18:777-821.

Maddock, I., Harby, A. and Kemp, P. 2013. Ecohydraulics: An Integrated Approach. Somerset, GB: Wiley-Blackwell, ProQuest ebrary. 2013. Web. 13 May 2016, Copyright © 2013. Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved.

McCullah, J. and Gray, D. 2005. Environmentally Sensitive Channel and Bank Protection Measures. NCHRP Report No.544. Salix Applied Earthcare Redding. California.

Pasternack,G.B. and Brown, R.A. 2011. Ecohydraulic Design of Gravel-Bed River Rehabilitation in the Lewiston Dam Reach of the Trinity River, CA" University of California Davis, CA

PEDRR (Partnership for Environment and Disaster Risk Reduction). 2010. Demonstrating the Role of Ecosystems-Based Management for Disaster Risk Reduction, UNEP, Geneva, Switzerland.

Pizzuto, J.E. and Meckelnburg, T.S. 1989. Evaluation of a linear bank erosion equation. Water Resources Research 25 (5): 1005-1013, 1989..

Rini, D.S. 2014. Biotilic Guidelines for River Health Monitoring, ECOTON, Ministry of Environment of the Republic of Indonesia (in Indonesian).

Simon, A. and Pollen, N. 2006. A Model of Streambank Stability Incorporating Hydraulic Erosion adn the Effect of Riparian Vegetation, Proceedings of the Eighth Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference (8thFISC) Reno, NV. USA, April2-6.

Stromberg, J., Briggs, M., Scott, M. and Shafroth, P. 2004. Chapter 1 Riparian Ecosystem Assessments, Riparian Areas of the Southwestern United States Hydrology, Ecology, and Management, Lewis Publishers, CRC Press Company, Florida USA.

Tockner, K., Lorang, M.S. and Stanford, J.A. 2012. River flood plains are model ecosystems to test general hyrogeomorphic and ecological concepts. River Research and Applications 26 (1): 76-86.

Welcomme, R.L. 1985. River Fisheries, FAO Fisheries Technical Paper, 262-330.

Yu, M.H., Wei, H.Y. and Wu, S.B. 2015. Experimental study on the bank erosion and interaction with near-bank bed evolution due to fluvial hydraulic force. International Journal of Sediment Research 30: 81-89.

Downloads

Submitted

26-07-2017

Accepted

29-08-2017

Published

02-10-2017

How to Cite

Rini, D. S., Arisoesilaningsih, E., Harisuseno, D., & Soemarno, S. (2017). Application of ecohydraulic bank protection model to improve river bank stability and biotic community in Surabaya River. Journal of Degraded and Mining Lands Management, 5(1), 975–986. https://doi.org/10.15243/jdmlm.2017.051.975

Issue

Section

Research Article