Instream flows are needed to remove undesirable accumulations of sediment. Fines and sand accumulate on and in gravels during periods of low flow and must be removed (flushed) periodically in order for the gravel to continue as suitable habitat for aquatic animals. Sediment of all sizes can also fil
The future of habitat modeling and instream flow assessment techniques
β Scribed by Hardy, Thomas B.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 252 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0886-9375
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper examines emerging trends in applied instream flow assessment methods within the context of an ecologically based assessment framework, in light of the challenges imposed by the spatial and temporal domains of aquatic ecosystems. I will attempt to highlight what I consider to be the more promising technologies, modeling techniques and analysis approaches that represent workable tools to meet the needs of practical, applied instream flow assessments. To this end, I will touch on measurement techniques and technologies used to characterize the spatial domain of river systems, analysis tools for characterization of the hydrodynamic elements of rivers in both the spatial and temporal domains, and finally tools and approaches which integrate the biological elements at the individual, population and community levels. Much of my view of the future of habitat modeling remains an abstraction, in that integration of all the pieces has yet to be accomplished, field validation remains unproven, availability of an integrated analysis framework (i.e. computer software system) is not yet available, and a clear framework for selection and application of specific tools has not been developed. However, in presenting this particular view of the future, I hope to stimulate a broader collaborative effort between biologists, engineers and resource managers that continues to move the state-of-the-art forward. This effort should not consider the plurality of methods or analytical procedures as competing approaches, but rather as representing a tool-rich environment upon which researchers and practitioners can draw to provide scientifically based quantifications in support of management decisions which must protect and enhance our aquatic ecosystems.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Soil wind erosion is the primary process and the main driving force for land desertification and sandβdust storms in arid and semiβarid areas of Northern China. While many researchers have studied this issue, this study quantified the various indicators of soil wind erosion, using the G
## Abstract In the atmospheric corrosion of copper, nickel, and iron, the adsorption of water affects the corrosion rates. Knowledge of water adsorption and metal oxyhydroxide formation is important in understanding the atmospheric corrosion process. The purposes of the present research were (1) to