Temporary Rivers & Streams Meeting 2022
Date and time
Location
Nottingham Trent University, Clifton Campus
Clifton Lane
Clifton
NG11 8NS
United Kingdom
Our 7th Temporary Rivers & Streams Meeting - back on Clifton Campus for the first time since 2019... and streamed live online via Teams.
About this event
0930 BST. On campus registration and coffee ☕🍪
0950 Welcome to the meeting – Judy England/Rachel Stubbington
Session 1: Two topics: mapping t-streams 📌… and plants 🍂
Chair: Cath Sefton
1000 Mathis Messager (INRAE, France/McGill University, Canada)
How many temporary rivers are there – and why should we care?
1015 Romain Sarremejane (INRAE, France)
Leaves in temporary streams: where, when and why does organic matter matter?
1030 Amélie Truchy (INRAE, France)
The DRYvER app: mapping the global extent of wet and dry streams
1045 Chris Mainstone (Natural England, UK)
Progress with priority habitat work in (temporary) rivers and streams
1100 Discussion / break ☕🍪
Session 2: Monitoring and management 🐌
Chairs: Richard Handley and Chloe Hayes
1130 Chloe Hayes (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
Three (and a bit) years in wet and dry streams: insights to inform monitoring, management and restoration
1200 Tory Milner (University of Huddersfield)
Not today succa! Plant colonisation in dry river channels
1215 Kieran Gething (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
Rare temporary river specialist insects: how rare are they really?
1230 Jamal Kabir (Nottingham Trent University, UK)
The biodiversity hidden in England’s most remote chalk streams and springs
1245 John Murray-Bligh (Environment Agency, UK)
Six years on, has the Environment Agency’s interest in temporary rivers changed?
1300 Poster pitches
1315 Lunch including poster viewing ☕🥪🍰
Posters
Mélanie Milin (University of Huddersfield): Taxonomic and functional metacommunity assembly in braided intermittent rivers
Session 3: Temporary streams and people 👨👩👧
Chair: Tim Sykes
1415 Paul J. Wood (Loughborough University)
Richard Chadd In Memoriam talk
1445 Tim Sykes (University of Southampton, UK)
How do winterbournes make you feel? The aquatic–terrestrial moods of temporary chalk streams.
1500 Alex Deacon (Wessex Rivers Trust, UK)
Working with stakeholders to manage winterbournes
1515 Mike Bogan (University of Arizona)
Benefits and challenges in a multi-stakeholder effort to restore flow and ecosystem function in a dewatered desert river
1530 Discussion
Chair John Murray-Bligh (Environment Agency, UK)
1600 Close
Organizer contact details:
rachel.stubbington@ntu.ac.uk and judy.england@environment-agency.gov.uk