支持大型河流系统保护行动的科学:美国俄勒冈州威拉米特河

IF 5.1 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Rebecca Flitcroft , Luke Whitman , James White , Rose Wallick , Laurel Stratton Garvin , Cassandra Smith , Robert Plotnikoff , Michael Mulvey , Tobias Kock , Krista Jones , Peter Gruendike , Carolyn Gombert , Guillermo Giannico , Andrew Dutterer , Daniel Brown , Hannah Barrett , Brian Bangs , Robert M. Hughes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

支持大型河流恢复和保护的管理和保护工作令人望而生畏,这反映了挑战的复杂性以及为实现可衡量的变化所需的努力程度(在政策、经济投资和空间范围方面)。这些大型系统通常经历了密集的开发和监管,削弱了它们应对气候变化或野火等干扰的能力。从功能上讲,大型河流和流域管理需要从社会、生态、地球物理和水文科学中获得见解。这种多学科的视角可以揭示河网生物群落与经常受到人类活动影响的季节性变化的环境条件之间的综合关系。由于人为影响以及气候改变温度和降水模式,大型河流及其流域不断变化。由于这些因素,知识的状态必须提高以应对不断变化的条件。美国俄勒冈州西部的威拉米特河是近几十年来经历了严重退化和修复投资的流域的一个典型例子。创新科学促进了精细规模、空间广泛的数据集和模型的开发,可以产生有针对性的保护和恢复行动,这些行动在整个河网中都是优先考虑的。这种优先顺序使投资决策能够由特定地点的条件驱动,同时考虑生态改善的潜力。在这里,我们回顾了威拉米特河流域的水文、地貌、生态和社会条件,包括定居前、河流发展和当代,并提供了一个可供考虑的未来愿景。目前,可以利用有关鱼类种群和栖息地、水文条件、地貌、水质和土地利用的详细信息,就保护、恢复和开发做出明智的决定。整个威拉米特河的战略管理和目标制定时机已经成熟,通过专注于保护和管理的既定机构(如公共机构、非营利流域团体、部落和大学)实现的综合科学可以为这些努力提供信息。威拉米特河流域开创的科学和社会网络创建方法为制定基于保护的综合规划提供了见解,该规划可在全球其他大型河流系统中实施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Science to support conservation action in a large river system: The Willamette River, Oregon, USA

Management and conservation efforts that support the recovery and protection of large rivers are daunting, reflecting the complexity of the challenge and extent of effort (in terms of policy, economic investment, and spatial extent) needed to afford measurable change. These large systems have generally experienced intensive development and regulation, compromising their capacity to respond to disturbances such as climate change or wildfire. Functionally, large river and basin management require insights gained from social, ecological, geophysical, and hydrological sciences. This multi-disciplinary perspective can unveil the integrated relationship between a river network's biotic community and seasonally variable environmental conditions that are often influenced by human activities. Large rivers and their basins are constantly changing due to anthropogenic influences and as climate modifies patterns of temperature and precipitation. Because of these factors, the state of knowledge must advance to address changing conditions. The Willamette River, in western Oregon, USA, is a prime example of a basin that has experienced significant degradation and investment in rehabilitation in recent decades. Innovative science has facilitated development of fine-scale, spatially extensive datasets and models that can generate targeted conservation and rehabilitation actions that are prioritized across the entire river network. This prioritization allows investment decisions to be driven by site-specific conditions while simultaneously considering potentials for ecological improvement. Here, we review hydrologic, geomorphic, ecologic, and social conditions in the Willamette River basin through time—including pre-settlement, river development, and contemporary periods—and offer a future vision for consideration. Currently, detailed information about fish populations and habitat, hydrologic conditions, geomorphology, water quality, and land use can be leveraged to make informed decisions about protection, rehabilitation, and development. The time is ripe for strategic management and goal development for the entire Willamette River, and these efforts can be informed by comprehensive science realized through established institutions (e.g., public agencies, non-profit watershed groups, Tribes, and universities) focused on conservation and management. The approaches to science and social-network creation that were pioneered in the Willamette River basin offer insights into the development of comprehensive conservation-based planning that could be implemented in other large river systems globally.

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