woodjam
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]woodjam (plural woodjams)
- (ecology) An accumulation of wood and debris from vegetation that slows the flow of a river or stream.
- 1977, Harmon Henkin, The Complete Fisherman's Catalog, page 65:
- Straining against the last light, I finally got it tied on and tossed it out to the top of the woodjam.
- 1993, Robert Doppelt, Mary Scurlock, Entering the Watershed, page 67:
- […] to treat potential chronic and catastrophic sedimentation problems caused by forest roads, restore riparian areas and re-establish large woodjams at ecologically appropriate sites.
- 2012, Tim Beechie, Philip Roni, Stream and Watershed Restoration:
- Fishes (especially small ones) often use complex hiding cover such as roots,wood jams, or aquatic macrophytes to avoid predators.
- 2020, Ellen Wohl, Rivers in the Landscape, page 286:
- In the anastomosing river model, stable alluvial deposits associated with woodjams can resist lateral channel erosion for hundreds of years, providing sites for tree germination.