Abstract

A conceptual model of integrated catchment management (ICM) is presented in which ICM is defined as a process to achieve both ecosystem resilience and community resilience. It requires not only biophysical knowledge developed by hydrologists and other environmental scientists, but an active partnership with catchment communities and stakeholders to break the 'paradigm lock' described by the UNESCO-HELP programme. This paper reports observations from ICM research in the Motueka HELP demonstration basin in the upper South Island of New Zealand. The Motueka occupies 2 170 km2 of land yet the river effects are felt on the seabed more than 50 km2 off- shore, so the true 'catchment' is larger. A hydrologically temperate mountainous catchment with horticultural, agricultural, plantation forestry and conservation land uses, the Motueka also hosts an internationally recognised brown trout fishery. Land and water management issues driving ICM research include water allocation conflicts between instream and irrigation water uses, impacts on water quality of runoff from intensifying land uses, catchment impacts on coastal productivity and aquacul- ture, and how to manage catchment processes in an integrated way that addresses cumulative effects of development. Collaboration with catchment stakeholders can be viewed as having two primary purposes: • Building knowledge and commitment of resource users towards sustainable resource management (collaborative learning) • Stakeholder involvement in resource management itself (governance). Examples are presented of a Collaborative Learning Group on Sediment learning of their differing perspectives on fine sedi - ment impacts, and a Catchment Landcare Group working with scientists to improve water quality in their river. Success fac- tors for water user committees making decisions about water resource management include creating opportunities to commu- nicate and build trust, share scientific knowledge on the issue, and willingness to compromise. Functioning catchment groups have potential to take on delegated governance responsibility for meeting agreed water quality and other community goals. Finally a scenario modelling framework IDEAS (Integrated Dynamic Environmental Assessment System) is presented, in which environmental indicators such as nutrient fluxes are simulated alongside socio-economic indicators such as job num - bers and catchment GDP for a range of land and marine use options.

Highlights

  • Collaboration with catchment stakeholders can be viewed as having two primary purposes: Building knowledge and commitment of resource users towards sustainable resource management Stakeholder involvement in resource management itself

  • Examples are presented of a Collaborative Learning Group on Sediment learning of their differing perspectives on fine sediment impacts, and a Catchment Landcare Group working with scientists to improve water quality in their river

  • A scenario modelling framework IDEAS (Integrated Dynamic Environmental Assessment System) is presented, in which environmental indicators such as nutrient fluxes are simulated alongside socio-economic indicators such as job numbers and catchment GDP for a range of land and marine use options

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Summary

Scope of paper

This paper reviews some integrative approaches aimed at better linking environmental research and management ( hydrological science) with economic, social and cultural outcomes in the Motueka HELP basin of New Zealand. The examples presented include collaboration methods and an integrative modelling approach called IDEAS (Integrated Dynamic Environmental Assessment System) These are among the research findings from the Motueka basin developed since the 2002 Kalmar HELP symposium This is a government-funded research partnership in which researchers, community and sector group stakeholders, and local government work collaboratively on basin-scale resource management issues. This includes catchment impacts on the adjacent coast, in which the seabed influence of the river plume extends more than 50 km, meaning that effectively the catchment extends beyond the river mouth (Forrest et al, 2007)

Conceptual models for ICM
ICM process in the Motueka catchment
Collaborative processes
Defining ICM as a process
Degrees of Counsel
IDEAS modelling across the quadruple bottom line
Environmental performance
IDEAS may be applied at a range of
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