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tus of Instream Flow Science in the Southeastern US Mary M. Davis, Ph.D., Technical Advisor Southern Instream Flow

Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

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Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US. Mary M. Davis, Ph.D., Technical Advisor Southern Instream Flow Network. Objectives. Present a scientific framework for establishing protective instream flow criteria Provide an update on advances in instream flow science in SE US - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Status of Instream Flow Sciencein the Southeastern US

Mary M. Davis, Ph.D., Technical AdvisorSouthern Instream Flow Network

Page 2: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Objectives• Present a scientific framework for establishing

protective instream flow criteria

• Provide an update on advances in instream flow science in SE US

• Strengthen links between mollusk and instream flow scientists in the region

Page 3: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

“Hydrologic regimes are the master variables in aquatic ecosystems.” Poff et al. 1997

Page 4: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Alteration of hydrologic regimes is a primary threat to the ecological

integrity of aquatic ecosystems.

Source: USFSCSIROMk2-B2 Scenario

Page 5: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

WaterManagement

Who decides how much water needs to stay in the rivers?

Page 6: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

IFIM

ELOHA

ESWM

Scientifically credible environmental flow standards are necessary to balance economic pressures.

IFIM

Page 7: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Southern Instream Flow Network

Purpose - To facilitate protective instream flow policies and practices in 15 southern states by providing science-based resources and opening lines of communication.

More information at: www.southeastaquatics.net/programs/sifn/

Page 8: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Southern State Approaches for Determining IF Standards

• Minimum flow threshold– 7Q10 (e.g., AL, LA, MS)– Modified Tennant (e.g., AR, GA, SC)

• Statistically based standards(e.g., FL St Johns WMD, Potomac River Commission)

• Percent of flow approaches(e.g., FL SW Florida and Suwannee River WMDs, TN Presumptive WQ Standard)

Page 9: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Science-based Methods to Determine Instream Flow Needs

• Incremental Flow Method (IFIM)

• Ecologically Sustainable Water Management (ESWM)

• Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration (ELOHA)

Page 10: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Science-based Methods to Determine Instream Flow Needs

• Incremental Flow Method (IFIM)

• Ecologically Sustainable Water Management (ESWM)

• Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration (ELOHA)

Page 11: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration (ELOHA)

http://conserveonline.org/workspaces/eloha

(Source: Poff et al. 2010)

Page 12: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Bioti

c ind

icat

or

Hydrologic alteration

Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration (ELOHA)

http://conserveonline.org/workspaces/eloha

(Source: Poff et al. 2010)

Page 13: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Characteristic species

Thriving species

1.0

0.9 -

0.8 -

0.7 -

0.6 -

0.5 -

0.4 -

0.3 -

0.2 -

0.1 -

0.0

Prop

ortio

n of

initi

al fi

sh

popu

latio

n m

etric

Proportion of index flow removed

0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0

Adverse resource impact

Acceptable resource impact

Source: Michigan Groundwater Conservation Advisory Council, 2007

ECO

LOG

ICAL

CO

ND

ITIO

NUse of Ecological Response to

Limit Flow Alteration

Page 14: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

0

400

800

1200

1600

2000

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350

Flow

(cfs

)

10%

8%

13%18%

LFT = 67 cfs

Example Flow PrescriptionPercent of Flow and Seasonality

of allowable cumulative withdrawals

Day of YearSource: Southwest Florida Water Management District MFL Program

Page 15: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Objectives• Present a scientific framework for establishing

protective instream flow criteria

• Provide an update on advances in instream flow science in SE US

• Strengthen links between mollusk and instream flow scientists in the region

Page 16: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

• Problem: The limited focus on research and funding for instream flows has resulted in a lack of science to support protective instream flow standards.

• Objective: to highlight research needs and coordinate sources of funding and research to address these needs.

• Goal: to ensure that instream flow research is focused on the needs of water resource managers for scientifically credible and protective state instream flow standards and practices.

Southern Instream Flow Research Agendawww.southeastaquatics.net/programs/sifn

Page 17: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

South AtlanticGulf Coast Prairie

Support for theSouthern Instream Flow Research Agenda

Page 18: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Instream Flow Products Under Development for the LCCs

• Hydrologic Foundation • Ecological Databases • Flow-ecology Literature Review• Flow Alteration Assessment • River Classification• Aquatic Conservation Priorities

Page 19: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Integration of Instream Research Agenda ProductsTo Develop Flow-Ecology Relationships

Ecol

ogic

al C

ondi

tion

Hydrologic Alteration

+

+

-

- 0

Hydrologic Models

Ecological ConditionAssessment

Aquatic Conservation Priority Areas

Sources of Flow Alteration

River Classification

Hypothetical Flow-Ecology Relationships

Quantify Flow Alteration

EcologicalMetric

Research Priorities and ValidationEc

olog

ical

Dat

a

Page 20: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Integration of Instream Research Agenda ProductsTo Develop Flow-Ecology Relationships

Ecol

ogic

al C

ondi

tion

Hydrologic Alteration

+

+

-

- 0

Hydrologic Models

Ecological ConditionAssessment

Aquatic Conservation Priority Areas

Sources of Flow Alteration

River Classification

Hypothetical Flow-Ecology Relationships

Quantify Flow Alteration

EcologicalMetric

Research Priorities and ValidationEc

olog

ical

Dat

a

Page 21: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

SE River Classification

• Based on existing classifications

• Hierarchical scales for geomorphology, hydrology, and biota

• Principals: John Faustini, USFWS and Chris Konrad, USGS

Page 22: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

SARP Flow Alteration Assessment

Approach – Qualitatively assess sources, spatial distribution, and relative magnitude of hydrologic alteration from water consumption, impervious cover, and dams.

Page 23: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Preliminary SE Flow-Ecology Relationships

Source: McManamay et al. 2011

Page 24: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Objectives• Present a scientific framework for establishing

protective instream flow criteria

• Provide an update on advances in instream flow science in SE US

• Strengthen links between mollusk and instream flow scientists in the region

Page 25: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Integration of Instream Research Agenda ProductsTo Develop Flow-Ecology Relationships

Ecol

ogic

al C

ondi

tion

Hydrologic Alteration

+

+

-

- 0

Hydrologic Models

Ecological ConditionAssessment

Aquatic Conservation Priority Areas

Sources of Flow Alteration

River Classification

Hypothetical Flow-Ecology Relationships

Quantify Flow Alteration

EcologicalMetric

Research Priorities and ValidationEc

olog

ical

Dat

a

Page 26: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Priority Instream Flow Research Topic 3:Compile regional aquatic ecology data sets

Multistate Aquatic Resources Information Systemwww.marisdata.org

Integrating State Data into the National Fish Habitat Assessment

MARIS States (2010)

Page 27: Status of Instream Flow Science i n the Southeastern US

Conclusions:

• Instream flow science is advancing through state, regional, and national efforts.

• Access to biological monitoring data is key to developing scientific flow-ecology relationships.

• Good communication among mollusk scientists and instream flow programs will be key to leveraging limited resources and protection of southern aquatic resources.