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Science to Inform the Reconnection of Floodplains and Restoration of Green Space to Minimize Risk in the Future

Reconnecting Floodplains and Restoring Green Space as a Management Strategy to Minimize Risk and Increase Resilience in the Context of Climate and Landscape Change
Principal Investigator
Richard Palmer

Dates

Start Date
2015-07-07
End Date
2018-07-01
Release Date
2015

Summary

This project identifies opportunities to manage flows, connections, and landscapes to increase the resilience of human communities and ecosystems. This research identifies dynamic and adaptive solutions to managing river flows that allow continued provision of valuable infrastructure services such as flood control, hydropower, and water supply, while also supporting thriving river ecosystems - both today and into the future. The goals of the research were to: 1) Evaluate the potential impacts of climate change on hydrologic regimes, 2) Determine the flow regime changes that will be required to provide riverine environmental services and any risk associated with these changes, and 3) Explore management alternatives that mitigate potential [...]

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ConnecticutRiver_MPD.jpg
“Connecticut River - public domain”
thumbnail 1.12 MB image/jpeg

Purpose

G15AP00121

Project Extension

parts
typeTechnical Summary
valueThis research seeks to identify opportunities to manage flows, connections, and landscapes in a way that increases the resilience of human communities and ecosystems. Our research will identify dynamic and adaptive solutions to managing river flows that allow continued provision of valuable infrastructure services such as flood control, hydropower, and water supply, while also supporting thriving river ecosystems – both today and into the future. The research proposed is directly responsive to the NECSC’s FY15 Science Theme 3: Climate impacts on freshwater resources and ecosystems, Priority 1: Effects of Climate Change on Hydrologic Regimes, Ecological Flows, and Aquatic Connectivity. The goals of the research are threefold: 1) Evaluate the potential impacts of climate change on hydrologic regimes, 2) Determine the flow regime changes that will be required to provide riverine environmental services and any risk associated with these changes, and 3) Explore management alternatives that mitigate potential negative impacts and improve system robustness. Project goals will be accomplished by performing the following tasks: 1) Explicitly incorporate land use and climate change projections into hydrologic models to determine effects on stream flow, including changes in streamflow volumes, timing of runoff, and frequency of extreme events; 2) Develop economic and physical measures of floodplain performance that capture the environmental services provided and the losses associated with changing flow regimes, 3) Evaluate how the effectiveness of green infrastructure strategies, including floodplain protection and storage, would alter these effects, 4) Develop a structured decision-making framework that incorporates short-term streamflow forecasting, environmental services damage functions, and adaptive management strategies.
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2015
totalFunds149998.0
parts
typeAgreement Number
valueG15AP00121
typeAgreement Type
valueGrant
totalFunds149998.0

Additional Information

Alternate Titles

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC 6b8c2f2a-3fa3-4c9b-8f30-655930e41cc2
StampID NCCWSC NE14-PR0125

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