Abstract

Flow alteration is a pervasive issue across highly urbanized watersheds that can impact the physical and biological condition of streams. In highly altered systems, flows may support novel ecosystems that may not have been found under natural conditions and reference-based environmental flow targets may not be relevant. Moreover, stream impairments such as altered channel morphology may make reference-based environmental flow targets less effective in supporting ecosystem functions. Here, we develop an approach for determining ecological flow needs in highly modified systems to support existing ecological uses utilizing the California Environmental Flows Framework (CEFF). CEFF was established to provide guidance on developing environmental flow recommendations across California’s diverse physical landscape and broad array of management contexts. This paper illustrates the application of CEFF in informing ecologically-based flow restoration in a highly altered region of South Orange County, California. The steps of CEFF were implemented including a stakeholder process to establish goals and provide input throughout the project; identifying the natural ranges of functional flow metrics, or distinct components of the natural flow regime that support ecosystem functions; refining ecological flow needs to account for altered channel morphology and the life history needs of riparian and fish species; and assessing flow alteration to inform management strategies. Key considerations and lessons learned are discussed in the context of developing ecological flow needs in highly altered systems including when non-flow related management actions (i.e., channel rehabilitation) are necessary to achieve ecological goals.

Highlights

  • Flow alteration is a pervasive issue across highly urbanized watersheds that can impact the physical and biological condition of streams (Poff and Zimmerman, 2010)

  • In developing the overall ecological flow needs, we evaluated whether the natural range of flow metrics will be suitable for the indicator species, to ensure that the holistic functional flow needs will be supportive of the ecological management goals for the region

  • We provide a simplistic one-dimensional hydraulic analysis of physical habitat suitability at a high priority stream reach to develop ecological flow needs that could be implemented at other priority stream reaches, with the primary goal of illustrating the process and application of California Environmental Flows Framework (CEFF) in an altered system

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Summary

Introduction

Flow alteration is a pervasive issue across highly urbanized watersheds that can impact the physical and biological condition of streams (Poff and Zimmerman, 2010). In highly altered river systems, such as streams with augmented flows from urban or wastewater discharges, altered flow regimes could support novel ecosystems and species, such as birds that did not occur under “natural” conditions (Luthy et al, 2015; Wolfand et al, 2021). In such systems, ecological flow needs, or quantifiable flow metrics that describe ranges of flows that must be maintained to support ecosystem functions, should be tailored to a suite of species of management concern that are representative of communities, rather than mimicking the entire natural flow regime (Tonkin et al, 2021)

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