Reach Surveys and GIS Analysis of Stream Habitat in the Lower Platte River
Basin, Nebraska
By Ronald B. Zelt and Steven A. Frenzel
ABSTRACT: The lower Platte River drains a 78,000 km2 basin below
the confluence of the North and South Platte Rivers downstream to its mouth.
Habitat features were surveyed at seven selected stream reaches in the basin
in October 1993 and 1994. Specific sets of collected
measurements included channel cross-section profiles, longitudinal water-
surface profiles, planimetry of targeted in-stream habitat features, and
topography of selected floodplain and terrace features. Surveyed angles and
distances were converted to geospatial data sets using geographic information
system (GIS) techniques. Spatial analyses were performed to derive parameters
such as channel width, bank angle, stream-centerline stationing, and total
shoreline length. Stream slope was estimated using linear regression.
Results include detailed maps of reach planimetry and channel cross-sectional
graphs showing interannual variability in habitat conditions from 1993 to
1994. The data also serve as baseline information for assessing interdecadal
variability, a planned component of the water-quality
assessment program for which the surveys were conducted.
CITATION:
Zelt, R.B., and Frenzel, S.A., 1995, Reach surveys and GIS analysis of
stream habitat in the lower Platte River basin, Nebraska [abs.]: Bulletin of
the North American Benthological Society, v. 12, no. 1, p. 203.