Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / News & Events / Southern Instream Flow Network Update

Southern Instream Flow Network Update

Update On Instream Flow Issues In The Southeast

Hello Southern River Fans,

Did you miss the webinar this week about the SARP Instream Flow Resources?  No worries.  You can view a recording of the presentation by clicking here!  Want still more information?  This is your day.  Maps can be viewed and supporting data downloaded from the SE Region Conservation Planning Atlas.  Documentation about how each resource was developed can be found at the Southern Instream Flow Network page on the SARP webiste.  OMG!  You want more?!  Come join us at the SD AFS Instream Flow Management workshop next Friday in Charleston.  See more information below!

And don't miss Rodney Knight et al.'s work on ecological responses to flow alteration in Tennessee rivers.  Read more below.

As always, we will be happy to pass along any information you have about advancing instream flow science in the region and beyond.  Please send information to me anytime at mary@southeastaquatics.net.

Many thanks and have a happy holiday season and new year,

Mary Davis

SIFN Coordinator

Streamflow Alteration Impacts Fish Diversity in Local Rivers

new USGS study quantifies change in fish diversity in response to streamflow alteration in the Tennessee River basin.

This study highlights the importance of the timing, magnitude, and variability of low streamflows and the frequency and magnitude of high streamflows as key characteristics critical to assessing how fish communities change in response to streamflow alteration. This study was completed using fish community data collected by the Tennessee Valley Authority, and predictions of streamflow characteristics at more than 600 locations.

Knight, RR, JC Murphy, WJ Wolfe, CF Saylor, and AK Wales.  2013.  Ecological limit functions relating fish community response to hydrologic departures of the ecological flow regime in the
Tennessee River basin, United States.  Ecohydrol. (2013).  Published online in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com) DOI: 10.1002/eco.1460.

 

Instream Flow Management workshop, held January 24 at the Southern Division, American Fisheries Society Spring meeting in Charleston, SC

This workshop will cover the historical foundations and recent advancements of instream flow science and provide guidance on practical application of instream flow tools and data that support management of warmwater stream habitats in Southern Division states. Early presentations will discuss the importance of instream flows to fish and wildlife and quality of life and will provide an overview of approaches to identify instream flow needs for rivers and streams from standard setting to site-based methods. A review of recent advancements including development of hydrology-based tools, spatially-explicit models, and multi-disciplinary frameworks, will provide guidance on practical applications.

The SARP instream flow resources will be introduced and demonstrated in an afternoon session.

There is still room for more.  Go to http://sdafs.org/meeting2014/ for more information about this meeting.  Bring your laptop!

Filed under: News, Aquatic, Workshop