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Disentangling the ecosystem service 'flood regulation': Mechanisms and relevant ecosystem condition characteristics

Journal

AMBIO
Volume 51, Issue 8, Pages 1855-1870

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13280-022-01708-0

Keywords

Ecosystem characteristics; EU Flood Directive; Flood mitigation; Flood prevention

Funding

  1. ELKH Centre for Ecological Research

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Riverine floods cause severe damages to human settlements and infrastructure, but ecosystems have the natural capacity to regulate floods. The flood regulating mechanisms are not consistently recognized in major ecosystem service classifications, highlighting the importance of assessing this ecosystem service for balanced landscape management.
Riverine floods cause increasingly severe damages to human settlements and infrastructure. Ecosystems have a natural capacity to decrease both severity and frequency of floods. Natural flood regulation processes along freshwaters can be attributed to two different mechanisms: flood prevention that takes place in the whole catchment and flood mitigation once the water has accumulated in the stream. These flood regulating mechanisms are not consistently recognized in major ecosystem service (ES) classifications. For a balanced landscape management, it is important to assess the ES flood regulation so that it can account for the different processes at the relevant sites. We reviewed literature, classified them according to these mechanisms, and analysed the influencing ecosystem characteristics. For prevention, vegetation biomass and forest extent were predominant, while for mitigation, the available space for water was decisive. We add some aspects on assessing flood regulation as ES, and suggest also to include flood hazard into calculations.

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