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INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc.

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Page 1: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTALFLOW ANALYSIS

Thomas R. PayneCertified Fisheries ProfessionalNormandeau Associates, Inc.

Page 2: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW TERMINOLOGY

• Environmental Flow is AKA:– Instream Flow– Ecological Flow– E-flow– Rarely “Minimum” Flow

“Environmental flows are the quantity and timing of water flows required to maintain the components, functions, processes, and resilience of freshwater ecosystems and the goods and services they provide to people.”

Page 3: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HISTORY OF DAMS/RIVER REGULATION

• Egypt – 3000 BC• Roman Empire – 500 BC to 500 AD• Japan – 400 AD to 900 AD• China – 833 AD (still there!)• Great Britain – 1787 AD• River Basin Development – 1930’s

– TVA (US), Columbia River (US), Volga River (USSR), Snowy Mountains (Australia)

Page 4: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HISTORY OF DAMS/RIVER REGULATION

• 1800’s – Ten per year• 1900-1920 – Fifty per year• 1920-1940 – One hundred per year• 1960’s – Five hundred per year• 2000’s – Thousands per year• Current Status of Dams

– 50,000 dams storing more than 1,00,000 m3

– 100,000 dams storing 100,000 m3

Page 5: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

TYPES OF ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW METHODS

• Hydrologic– Historic flows

• Hydraulic Rating– River channel characteristics

• Habitat Rating– Mechanistic/Observational

• Individual and Population Modeling– Population Dynamics/Interactions

• Professional Judgment– Economics/Environment

Page 6: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HISTORY OF ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW METHODS

• Late 1800s – United Kingdom– Navigation– Public health– Downstream users– Fisheries protection

• 1900s – United States (State Level)– Appropriation Doctrine– Riparian Doctrine– Reserve Doctrine

Page 7: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

APPROACHES IN THE ‘50S AND ‘60S

• Hydrologic– 7Q10 – Lowest seven days over ten years– Q90 – Ninety percent exceedance– Baxter’s percent of mean annual flow

• Hydraulic Rating– Wetted perimeter– Wetted usable width

• Professional Judgment– Managers “decide”, biologists “consult”

Page 8: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW BEFORE 1970

• Minimum or Base Flow– Single Threshold– Often applied to summer season– Often resulted in constant minimum flow– Did not consider flow variability

• Result– Habitat Degradation!

• Consequence– Awareness, laws, regulations, methods

Page 9: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

APPROACHES IN THE ‘70S

• Research Driven by Consequences• Hydrologic

– Tennant Method Percent of Mean Annual Flow Summer season, winter season, flushing

• Habitat Rating– Washington habitat area method (1972)– Waters’ habitat discharge method (1976)– Physical Habitat Simulation (1978)

Page 10: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

EXPLOSION OF APPROACHES

• 1980 – 16 Methods• 1986 – 70 Methods• 2002 – 207 Methods• 2015 – ??? Methods

Page 11: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HYDROLOGIC (31 IN 2002)

• Tennant• Modified Tennant• New England Base Flow• Flow Duration Curves• Texas Method• Basic Flow Method (Spain) • Flow Translucency Approach (Australia)• Range of Variability Approach

Page 12: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HYDRAULIC RATING (23 IN 2002)

• Wetted Perimeter• R-2 Cross• Washington Toe-Width• Oregon Method• Arkansas Method• Colorado Method• Standard Depth Approach• One-Flow Method

Page 13: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HABITAT RATING (58 IN 2002)

• Physical Habitat Simulation (PHABSIM)• River Simulation System (RSS – Norway)• Evaluation of Habitat (EVHA – France)• Computer Aided Simulation Model for

Instream Flow Requirements (CASiMIR)• Riverine Community Habitat Assessment

and Restoration Concept (RCHARC)• River2D• MesoHABSIM

Page 14: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

INDIVIDUAL/POPULATION DYNAMICS

• Individual Based Modeling (InSTREAM)• Systems Impact Assessment Model (SIAM)• Salmon Life Cycle Production Model

(SALMOD)• River Invertebrate Prediction and

Classification System (RIVPACS)• SALMOD II

Page 15: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

PROFESSIONAL JUDGMENT (16 IN 2002)

• Instream Flow Incremental Methodology• Building Block Methodology (BBM)• Downstream Response to Imposed Flow

Transformations (DRIFT)• Demonstration Flow Approach (DFA)• Expert Panel Assessment Method (EPAM)• Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration

(ELOHA)

Page 16: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

SO WHERE ARE WE NOW?

Page 17: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

METHODS AND METHODOLOGIES

• Method (tools)A process by which a task is completed.

• Methodology (approaches)A guideline system for solving a problem, with specific components such as phases, tasks, methods, techniques and tools.

Page 18: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

WHAT WE’RE MOSTLY DOING

• Methods– Tennant (and modifications)– Demonstration Flow Assessment– MesoHABSIM– Direct Habitat Mapping

• Methodologies– Instream Flow Incremental Methodology (IFIM) and PHABSIM (1D and 2D)– Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration

(ELOHA)– System for Environmental Flow Analysis

(SEFA)

Page 19: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

TENNANT (AND MODIFICATIONS)

Percentage of Mean Annual FlowNarrative Description October-March April-SeptemberFlushing or Maximum 200 200Optimum range 60-100 60-100Outstanding 40 60Excellent 30 50Good 20 40Fair or degrading 10 30Poor or minimum 10 10Severe degradation <10 <10

Tennant, D.L. 1975. Instream flow regimens for fish, wildlife, recreation and related environmental resources. USFWS, Billings, MT

Page 20: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

TENNANT (AND MODIFICATIONS)

Situation Flow RecommendationMMF < 40% MAF MMFMMF > 40% MAF and40% MMF < 40% MAF

40% MAF

40% MMF > 40% MAF 40% MMFMMF = Mean Monthly FlowMAF = Mean Annual Flow

Tessman, S.A. 1980. Environmental assessment, technical Appendix E, western Dakotas region of South Dakota study. WRRI, Brookings, SD

Others:Estes, C.C. 1984 (Washington), 1998 (Alaska)Trihey, E.W. 1996 (California)Bureau of Land Management. 2006 (Oregon, California)

Page 21: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

DEMONSTRATION FLOW ASSESSMENT(Railsback, S.F., and Kadvany, J. 2008)

• Step 1 – Frame the Decision– Clearly define the instream flow decision process

• Step 2 – Develop Conceptual Models of Flow Effects– Develop a shared understanding of important flow

mechanisms

• Step 3 – Select Habitat Metrics– Define the specific measures to be observed and

quantified

• Step 4 – Design and Conduct Field Observations– Observe and quantify or rate the selected habitat metrics

• Step 5 – Analyze Results– Rank alternative flows by the quantity or value of the

metrics

• Step 6 – Negotiate Instream Flows

Page 22: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

DEMONSTRATION FLOW ASSESSMENT(Railsback, S.F., and Kadvany, J. 2008)

Page 23: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

MesoHABSIM (Parasiewicz, P. 2001)

Page 24: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

MesoHABSIM (Parasiewicz, P. 2001)

Page 25: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

DIRECT HABITAT MAPPING (McBain & Trush 2013)

Habitat at 150 cfs

DIRECT HABITAT MAPPING

Habitat at 200 cfs

Page 26: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

INSTREAM FLOW INCREMENTAL METHODOLOGY(Bovee et al. 1998)

Page 27: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

INSTREAM FLOW INCREMENTAL METHODOLOGY(Bovee et al. 1998)

Hydraulics

Microhabitat area per unit length of stream

Channel structure

Microhabitat suitability

criteria

Page 28: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HYDRAULIC HABITAT MODELING (PHABSIM)

Page 29: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

HYDRAULIC HABITAT SIMULATION (PHABSIM)

XSEC 1

XSEC 2Hydraulic Model

Velocity: v i

Depth: d i

Substrate: s i

Biological Model

Velocity

Cv

Sv i Sd i Ss iSubstrate

Cs

Physical Habitat Index

Flow

AW

S

Page 30: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

1-D MODEL PHYSICAL REPRESENTATION

Page 31: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

CROSS SECTION PROFILE AND VELOCITY

Page 32: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

2-D MODEL PHYSICAL REPRESENTATION

Page 33: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

1-D HABITAT REPRESENTATION

O

O

O

O

OO

OOO

OOO

O

Data points

O

Page 34: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

O

OO

O

OO

O

O

OO

O

O

O

Data points

O

2-D HABITAT REPRESENTATION

Page 35: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

DVASW @150

0 1 2 3 4

VELOCITY IN FEET PER SECOND

0

1

2

3

DE

PT

H IN

FE

ET

Cover

4

5

6

Depth, Velocity and Attribute Scaled by Suitability and Weight at 150cfsT1 = 15% T2 = 35%

T3 = 35% T4 = 15%

T2

T3

T4

T1

Scaled & weighted data points,3-axis frequency analysis

N=132

Data Points Scaled by Suitability and Weight

Page 36: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

PHABSIM 1-D OR 2-D HABITAT INDEX

Page 37: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

ECOLOGICAL LIMITS OF HYDROLOGIC ALTERATION (ELOHA)

(Poff et al. 2009)

• ELOHA is “a new framework for developing regional environmental flow standards”

• ELOHA Framework1. Model hydrologic baseline and current

hydrograph2. Classify river segments by ecological

characteristics3. Determine the deviation of current flow from

baseline4. Develop flow alteration-ecological response

relationships

• ELOHA should occur in a consensus context• ELOHA should proceed in an adaptive

management context

Page 38: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

ECOLOGICAL LIMITS OF HYDROLOGIC ALTERATION (ELOHA)

(Poff et al. 2009)

Page 39: INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL FLOW ANALYSIS Thomas R. Payne Certified Fisheries Professional Normandeau Associates, Inc

QUESTIONS AND DISCUSSION…