Integrated catchment management-interweaving social process and science knowledge

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Abstract

This paper provides an overview of the Motueka integrated catchment management (ICM) research programme. This research was based on the thesis that achieving ecosystem resilience at a catchment scale requires active measures to develop community resilience. We define a generic adaptive planning and action process, with associated knowledge management and stakeholder involvement processes, and illustrate those processes with observations from five research themes: (1) water allocation; (2) land use effects on water; (3) land and freshwater impacts on the coast; (4) integrative tools and processes for managing cumulative effects; and (5) building human capital and facilitating community action. Our research clearly illustrates the benefits for effective decision-making of carrying out catchment scale science and management within collaborative processes which patiently develop trusting relationships. We conclude that coastal catchments should be managed as a holistic continuum from ridge tops to the sea and that some processes like floods or loss of community resilience have decadal consequences, which support the need for long-term monitoring and investment. © 2011 The Royal Society of New Zealand.

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APA

Fenemor, A., Phillips, C., Allen, W., Young, R. G., Harmsworth, G., Bowden, B., … Collins, A. (2011, September). Integrated catchment management-interweaving social process and science knowledge. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288330.2011.593529

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