Abstract Sand and gravel are widely used throughout the U.S. construction industry, but their extraction can significantly affect the physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of mined streams. Fisheries biologists often find themselves involved in the complex environmental and regulatory issues related to instream sand and gravel mining. This paper provides an overview of information presented in a symposium held at the 1997 midyear meeting of the Southern Division of the American Fisheries Society in San Antonio, Texas, to discuss environmental issues and regulatory procedures related to instream mining. Conclusions from the symposium suggest that complex physicochemical and biotic responses to disturbance such as channel incision and alteration of riparian vegetation ultimately determine the effects of instream mining. An understanding of geomorphic processes can provide insight into the effects of mining operations on stream function, and multidisciplinary empirical studies are needed to dete...
[1]
L. Starnes,et al.
Effects of surface mining on aquatic resources in North America
,
1995
.
[2]
William H. Langer,et al.
Natural aggregate, building America's future
,
1993
.
[3]
Thomas F. Waters,et al.
Sediment in streams: Sources, biological effects, and control
,
1995
.
[4]
William H. Langer,et al.
Natural aggregates of the conterminous United States
,
1988
.
[5]
R. D. Barksdale.
The Aggregate Handbook
,
1991
.
[6]
G. Kondolf.
PROFILE: Hungry Water: Effects of Dams and Gravel Mining on River Channels
,
1997,
Environmental management.
[7]
G. Kondolf.
Geomorphic and environmental effects of instream gravel mining
,
1994
.