Want to talk like a schooled restoration ecologist? These sample words and phrases certainly won’t replace a degree in natural resource management, but they will give you a good idea of some of the most important terms being used in the field today.
Acid rain: Rain with increased acidity caused by environmental factors such as atmospheric pollutants that can be harmful to ecosystems and human structures.
Adaptation: A body part or behavior that helps a plant or animal to survive
Algae: Simple one-celled or many-celled plants capable of photosynthesis; usually aquatic.
Anthropogenic: Effects, processes, objects, or materials are those that are derived from human activities, as opposed to those occurring in natural environments without human influences.
Bankfull: Term describing peak flow; the stage at which the channel is nearly full.
Best Management Practice (BMP): Conservation measures intended to minimize or mitigate impacts from a variety of land-use activities.
Bog: A poorly drained fresh water wetland with a thick layer of peat moss, usually in a low area, and often with carnivorous plants.
Brackish: A mixture of salt and fresh water
Buttress: The broadened base of a tree trunk that helps to support the tree.
Channelization: Straightening and deepening of a stream or dredging of a new channel to which the stream is diverted.
Conservation: Planned management of a natural resource to prevent exploitation, destruction, or neglect
Decomposer: Organisms, bacteria and fungi that feed on and break down organic substances such as dead plants and animals.
Degradation: The geological process by which stream beds and floodplains are lowered in elevation by the removal of material; the opposite of aggradation.
Detritus: Dead plant, animal and other organic material.
Ecosystem: A community of organisms (plants and animals), interacting with each other and the non-living things in their environment.
Emergent: An aquatic plant that is rooted in a pond or stream bottom and has stems and leaves above the surface
Entrenchment: The vertical containment of a river and the degree to which it is incised in the valley floor.
Erosion: The wearing away of land by wind or water
Estuary: A partially closed coastal body of water where fresh water and salt water meet
Food Chain: The transfer of energy from the sun to plants to plant-eating animals, to animals that eat them, and so on. Each organism can be described by its position in the energy flow.
Food Web: A model more complex than a food chain that shows the relationship of plants and animals to each other. While a food chain will have one representative, a food web shows the multiple organisms that are interacting at each level.
Fresh Water Marsh: A wetland in which grasses are the predominant vegetation.
Fungi: A diverse group of mainly terrestrial organisms separated from other plants by their lack of chlorophyll. They are generally saprophytic or parasitic.
Geomorphology: The branch of geology that deals with the origin and nature of landforms.
Habitat: The environment in which an organism lives
Hard Surfacing: Any alteration to the soil that reduces natural permeability.
Humidity: The amount of water vapor in the air
Humus: A soil that is made of decayed plant and animal matter, such as leaves, plants and insects.
Hydrograph: A graph showing the stage or discharge of a waterway with respect to time.
Indigenous: Describing an organism that is natural to an area, rather than introduced.
Invertebrate: An animal that does not have a backbone or a spinal column.
Life Cycle: The sequence of changes making up the span of an organism’s life from the fertilization of gametes to the same stage in the subsequent generation.
Macroinvertebrate: Invertebrates that are large enough to be seen by the naked eye, such as insect larvae and crayfish.
Migration: Movement, usually seasonal, from one region or climate to another for the purpose of feeding or breeding
Organic: Derived from living organisms.
Peat: Partially decomposed plant material that accumulates in water-logged anaerobic conditions in temperate humid climates, often forming a layer several meters deep. Peat is used in fuel, and is the first step in coal formation.
pH: A measure that indicates the relative acidity or alkalinity of a substance. The pH scale ranges from 0 (most acid) to 14 (most basic), with a pH of 7 being neutral.
Photosynthesis: The process by which green plants synthesize carbohydrates (food) from carbon dioxide and water using light as an energy source, and releasing oxygen as a byproduct.
Pollutant: A substance that contaminates an environment.
Raptor: A raptor is a bird of prey which captures and kills its food in its specially adapted talons
Riffle: A section of stream channel characterized by partially or completely submerged coarser bed materials and shallower faster-moving water.
Riparian: Pertaining to or situated on the banks of a stream or other body of water.
Riparian Zone: An area of land and vegetation adjacent to a stream or other body of water that is at least periodically influenced by flooding.
Runoff: Rainfall not absorbed by soil.
Salinity: The degree of saltiness, usually referring to water.
Saltwater marsh: A wetland occurring along the coast, where grasses are the predominant vegetation.
Sediment: Particles derived from rocks or biological materials that have been transported by a fluid.
Sinuosity: The ratio of channel length to direct down-valley distance.
Submergent: An aquatic plant that is rooted in a pond or stream bottom with completely submerged stems and leaves.
Swamp: A wetland in which the soil is saturated and often inundated with water. Trees are the dominant cover vegetation.
Thalweg: The middle, chief, or deepest part of a channel or waterway.
Water cycle: The continuous circulation of water in systems throughout the planet, involving condensation, precipitation, runoff, evaporation and transpiration.
Watershed: The entire area that contributes surface runoff to a given drainage system.
Wetland: An area that, at least periodically, has waterlogged soil or is covered with a relatively shallow layer of water. Wetlands support plants and animals that are adapted to living in a watery environment. Bogs, freshwater and saltwater marshes, and swamps are examples of wetlands.
Request Experience EcoBlu’s NEW 126-page glossary of river, stream and wetland restoration terms via info@troutheadwaters.com






