4.2 Article

Principles for urban stormwater management to protect stream ecosystems

期刊

FRESHWATER SCIENCE
卷 35, 期 1, 页码 398-411

出版社

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/685284

关键词

urban hydrology; management; stream protection; stream restoration

资金

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB 1427007]
  2. NSF Partnerships for International Research and Education [OISE-1243543]
  3. NSF [EPSCoR IIA 1208732]
  4. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/K013661/1]
  5. Melbourne Water, through the Melbourne Waterway Research Practice Partnership
  6. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT10010044]
  7. Office Of The Director
  8. Office of Integrative Activities [1208732] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Office Of The Director
  10. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering [1243543] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Urban stormwater runoff is a critical source of degradation to stream ecosystems globally. Despite broad appreciation by stream ecologists of negative effects of stormwater runoff, stormwater management objectives still typically center on flood and pollution mitigation without an explicit focus on altered hydrology. Resulting management approaches are unlikely to protect the ecological structure and function of streams adequately. We present critical elements of stormwater management necessary for protecting stream ecosystems through 5 principles intended to be broadly applicable to all urban landscapes that drain to a receiving stream: 1) the ecosystems to be protected and a target ecological state should be explicitly identified; 2) the postdevelopment balance of evapotranspiration, stream flow, and infiltration should mimic the predevelopment balance, which typically requires keeping significant runoff volume from reaching the stream; 3) stormwater control measures (SCMs) should deliver flow regimes that mimic the predevelopment regime in quality and quantity; 4) SCMs should have capacity to store rain events for all storms that would not have produced widespread surface runoff in a predevelopment state, thereby avoiding increased frequency of disturbance to biota; and 5) SCMs should be applied to all impervious surfaces in the catchment of the target stream. These principles present a range of technical and social challenges. Existing infrastructural, institutional, or governance contexts often prevent application of the principles to the degree necessary to achieve effective protection or restoration, but significant potential exists for multiple co-benefits from SCM technologies (e.g., water supply and climate-change adaptation) that may remove barriers to implementation. Our set of ideal principles for stream protection is intended as a guide for innovators who seek to develop new approaches to stormwater management rather than accept seemingly insurmountable historical constraints, which guarantee future, ongoing degradation.

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