RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Saltcedar influence on sedimentation in the Brazos River JF Journal of Soil and Water Conservation FD Soil and Water Conservation Society SP 298 OP 301 VO 37 IS 5 A1 W. H. Blackburn A1 R. W. Knight A1 J. L. Schuster YR 1982 UL http://www.jswconline.org/content/37/5/298.abstract AB Saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) infestations along the Brazos River between Seymour. Taus. and the river's confluence with the Clear Fork occupied 57 percent of the original ricer channel by 1979. As saltcedar established on sandbars and channel edges, the plants stabilized the channel sediments causing deposition. By 1979, 3 meters of sediment had been deposited in the saltcedur- infested channel, and the river channel's width had been reduced by 89.6 meters. The presence of saltcedar and subsequent sediment deposition and channel closure in the Brazos River effectively reduced sedimentation of Possum Kingdom Lake. However, the saltcedar invasion resulted in higher flood stages for similar flow volumes. Thus enlarging the area inundated by flood waters.