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© Mark Godfrey Brian Richter, Director Global Freshwater Program © Insert Image Credit Environmental Flows for People and Nature.

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Presentation on theme: "© Mark Godfrey Brian Richter, Director Global Freshwater Program © Insert Image Credit Environmental Flows for People and Nature."— Presentation transcript:

1 © Mark Godfrey Brian Richter, Director Global Freshwater Program © Insert Image Credit Environmental Flows for People and Nature

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5 From “Rivers for Life: Managing Water for People and Nature” by Sandra Postel and Brian Richter, Island Press

6 This is the same volume!

7 Definition of Environmental Flows “Environmental flows” describe the quantity, timing, and quality of water flows required to sustain freshwater and estuarine ecosystems and the human livelihoods and well-being that depend on these ecosystems. Source: The Brisbane Declaration, International RiverSymposium, September 2007

8 Maintaining Natural Flow Patterns From “Rivers for Life: Managing Water for People and Nature” by Sandra Postel and Brian Richter, Island Press (adapted from Tharme and King 1998)

9 The Big Question How much flow alteration (e.g., from dam operations and water withdrawals) is too much?

10 050 100 150 0 5 10 15 wet-season low flow range dry-season low flow range Water depth (m) Cross-channel distance (m) 1:2 y flood 1:5 y flood Establishment of links between flow events, channel hydraulics & biophysical components Aquatic Wetbank Drybank Sedge Moss Lower shrub Upper shrub/tree Inter-annual flood events

11 JANFEBMARAPRMAYJUNJULAUGSEPOCTNOVDEC Environmental Flow Building Blocks Savannah River, below Thurmond Dam (River-Floodplain) Low Flows High Flow Pulses Floods 3,000 cfs; 3 successive years every 10-20 years Floodplain tree recruitment <5,000 cfs Adequate floodplain drainage Create shallow water habitat for small-bodied fish >8,000 cfs Larval drift for pelagic spawners 50,000-70,000 cfs; 2 weeks, avg every 2 yrs Maintain channel habitats Create floodplain topographic relief Provide fish access to the floodplain control invasive species Maintain wetlands and fill oxbows and sloughs Enhance nutrient cycling & improve water clarity Disperse tree seeds <13,000 cfs; 3 successive years, every 10-20 years Floodplain tree recruitment 8,000-12,000 cfs; Exchange water with oxbows 20,000-40,000 cfs; 2-3 days, 1/month Provide predator-free habitat for birds Disperse tree seeds Transport fish larvae Flush woody debris from floodplain to channel Floodplain access for fish Fish passage past navigation dam >30,000 cfs;5 pulses, >2 days with 2 events of 2 week duration (March and early April) Key Dry Year Avg Year Wet Year Details: 20,000-40,000 cfs; 2-3 days, 1/month Hypotheses: Provide predator-free habitat for birds Disperse tree seeds Transport fish larvae Flush woody debris from floodplain to channel Floodplain access for fish Fish passage past navigation dam

12 E-Flow implementation: Savannah River, Georgia

13 Ecosystem Monitoring & Adaptive Management

14 A framework for integrating environmental flows into regional water planning and management Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration (ELOHA)

15 Step 1. Hydrologic Foundation SCIENTIFIC PROCESS Monitoring Acceptable Ecological Conditions Societal Values and Management Needs Implementation SOCIAL PROCESS Adaptive Adjustments Flow Alteration-Ecological Response Relationships by River Type Stream Hydrologic Classification Degree of Hydrologic Alteration Hydrologic Alteration by River Type Baseline Hydrographs Developed Hydrographs Ecological Data and Indices Environmental Flow Standards Hydrologic Model and Stream Gauges Flow - Ecology Hypotheses Geomorphic Stratification Step 4. Flow-Ecology Relationships Step 3. Flow Alteration Step 2. Stream Classification

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