2021 journal article

A rolling stone gathers no eggs: the importance of stream insect egg laying natural history for stream restoration

Ecology.

author keywords: natural channel design; oviposition; particle size; recruitment; substrate stability
MeSH headings : Animals; Insecta; Oviposition; Ovum; Rivers
TL;DR: The degradation of waterways has led to the widespread practice of stream restoration aimed at accelerating recovery from damage by land-use change and other disturbances, but the biological recovery of restored streams often lags behind their physical and chemical recovery. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Source: ORCID
Added: March 14, 2021

The degradation of waterways has led to the widespread practice of stream restoration aimed at accelerating recovery from damage by land-use change and other disturbances. However, the biological recovery of restored streams often lags behind their physical and chemical recovery (Louhi et al. 2011). Improving stream restoration is important for many reasons, including mitigating the impacts of development and because annually billions of dollars are invested in stream restoration worldwide.