Authors
N Leroy Poff, Brian D Richter, Angela H Arthington, Stuart E Bunn, Robert J Naiman, Eloise Kendy, Mike Acreman, Colin Apse, Brian P Bledsoe, Mary C Freeman, James Henriksen, Robert B Jacobson, Jonathan G Kennen, David M Merritt, Jay H O’keeffe, Julian D Olden, Kevin Rogers, Rebecca E Tharme, Andrew Warner
Publication date
2010/1
Journal
Freshwater biology
Volume
55
Issue
1
Pages
147-170
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
1. The flow regime is a primary determinant of the structure and function of aquatic and riparian ecosystems for streams and rivers. Hydrologic alteration has impaired riverine ecosystems on a global scale, and the pace and intensity of human development greatly exceeds the ability of scientists to assess the effects on a river‐by‐river basis. Current scientific understanding of hydrologic controls on riverine ecosystems and experience gained from individual river studies support development of environmental flow standards at the regional scale.
2. This paper presents a consensus view from a group of international scientists on a new framework for assessing environmental flow needs for many streams and rivers simultaneously to foster development and implementation of environmental flow standards at the regional scale. This framework, the ecological limits of hydrologic alteration (ELOHA), is a synthesis of a …
Total citations
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