“Environmental flows” is a research discipline that emphasizes freshwater allocation in rivers to sustain desired ecological conditions and human well-being. The basis for environmental flow requirements has traditionally relied on hydrological and ecological data. Contemporary methods focus on detailed hydro-ecological relationships within river ecosystems; however, there is currently no structured approach to systematically incorporate socially relevant data into the environmental flows discipline. To address this limitation we developed a flexible framework that applies a social-ecological systems approach to account for multiple flow-related objectives that reflect both biophysical sustainability and societal preferences. First, we conceptualize the freshwater social-ecological system as a hierarchy of human and environmental domains. Then, we recommend stepwise procedures to assess flow-related vulnerabilities of important system attributes, address their feedbacks, and translate these assessments to a common classification for comparative analyses that guide holistic flow management decisions.
CITATION STYLE
Martin, D. M., Harrison-Atlas, D., Sutfin, N. A., & Poff, N. L. (2014). A Social-Ecological Framework to Integrate Multiple Objectives for Environmental Flows Management. Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education, 153(1), 49–58. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1936-704x.2014.03179.x
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