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Flow management to sustain groundwater-dominated stream ecosystems

โœ Scribed by G. E. Petts; M. A. Bickerton; C. Crawford; D. N. Lerner; D. Evans


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
377 KB
Volume
13
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6087

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โœฆ Synopsis


Groundwater is an important resource, not least in south-eastern areas of England, where chalk is the dominant aquifer. Such chalk-fed stream ecosystems are rich and highly productive, they have particularly important springhead wetlands, and are characterised by fast-growing trout populations. The legislative framework, founded on the Minimum Acceptable Flow concept, is in place to protect these stream ecosystems. In surface water dominated catchments, normal operational rules use prescribed (usually hands-o) ยฏows to protect in-river needs. Such rules are inappropriate for most groundwater-dominated catchments because of the slow response between change in groundwater abstraction and river ยฏow. This paper illustrates the use of an Ecologically Acceptable Flow Regime (i) to determine a MAF based on the annual volume of ยฏow, described as a ยฏow duration curve, to protect the riverine ecosystem at the catchment scale, and (ii) to set a prescribed ยฏow that must be maintained locally by river support.


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