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A new watershed assessment framework for Nova Scotia: A high-level, integrated approach for regions without a dense network of monitoring stations

机译:新斯科舍省的新分水岭评估框架:针对没有密集监测站网络的地区的高级综合方法

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摘要

High-level, integrated watershed assessments are a basic requirement for freshwater planning, as they create regional summaries of multiple environmental stressors for the prioritization of watershed conservation, restoration, monitoring, and mitigation. There is a heightened need for a high-level, integrated watershed assessment in Nova Scotia as it faces pressing watershed issues relating to acidification, soil erosion, acid rock drainage, eutrophication, and water withdrawals related to potential shale gas development. But because of the relative sparseness of the on-the-ground effects-based data, for example on water quality or fish assemblages, previously created approaches for integrated watershed assessment cannot be used. In a government/university collaboration, we developed a new approach that relies solely on easier-to-collect and more available exposure-based variables to perform the first high-level watershed assessment in Nova Scotia. In this assessment, a total of 295 watershed units were studied. We used Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to map and analyze 13 stressor variables that represent risks to aquatic environment (e.g., road/stream crossing density, acid rock drainage risk, surface water withdrawals, human land use, and dam density). We developed a model to link stressors with impacts to aquatic systems to serve as a basis for a watershed threat ranking system. Resource management activities performed by government and other stakeholders were also included in this analysis. Our assessment identifies the most threatened watersheds, enables informed comparisons among watersheds, and indicates where to focus resource management and monitoring efforts. Stakeholder communication tools produced by the NSWAP include a watershed atlas to communicate the assessment results to a broader audience, including policy makers and public stakeholders. This new framework for high-level watershed assessments provides a resource for other regions that also have limited availability of effects-based data, an important consideration as expanding human activities impact water resources in less densely monitored regions. Crown Copyright (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机译:高级别,综合性的分水岭评估是淡水规划的基本要求,因为它们创建了多个环境压力源的区域摘要,以优先考虑分水岭的保护,恢复,监测和缓解。由于新斯科舍省面临着与酸化,土壤侵蚀,酸性岩层排水,富营养化以及与潜在页岩气开发有关的取水问题等紧迫的分水岭问题,因此迫切需要对新斯科舍省进行高级别的综合分水岭评估。但是由于基于地面影响的数据(例如水质或鱼类种群)相对稀疏,因此无法使用先前创建的用于集水区评估的方法。在政府/大学的合作中,我们开发了一种新方法,该方法仅依赖于易于收集且基于暴露程度更高的变量来执行新斯科舍省的首次高级分水岭评估。在此评估中,总共研究了295个分水岭单位。我们使用了地理信息系统(GIS)来绘制和分析13个压力因子变量,这些变量代表了对水生环境的风险(例如,道路/河流交叉密度,酸性岩石排水风险,地表水抽取量,人类土地利用和大坝密度)。我们开发了一个模型,将压力源与影响与水生系统联系起来,以此作为分水岭威胁等级系统的基础。由政府和其他利益相关者执行的资源管理活动也包括在此分析中。我们的评估确定了受威胁最大的流域,在流域之间进行了明智的比较,并指出了资源管理和监测工作的重点。 NSWAP制定的利益相关者沟通工具包括一个分水岭图集,用于将评估结果传达给更广泛的受众,包括政策制定者和公共利益相关者。高级别分水岭评估的新框架为其他地区提供了资源,这些地区也缺乏基于效果的数据,这是重要的考虑因素,因为人类活动的扩大会影响监测密度较低的地区的水资源。官方版权(C)2014,Elsevier B.V.保留所有权利。

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