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Final Report: Application of the Headwater Intermittency Prediction (HIP) tool to characterize watershed resiliency and to mitigate ecological drought impacts on Pacific Northwest aquatic resources

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

2018-01-31, Final Report: Application of the Headwater Intermittency Prediction (HIP) tool to characterize watershed resiliency and to mitigate ecological drought impacts on Pacific Northwest aquatic resources: .

Summary

Streams are classified as perennial (flowing uninterrupted, year-round) or intermittent (flowing part of the year) or ephemeral (flowing only during rainfall events). The classifications of “streamflow permanence” were primarily established in the middle 20th century and are often outdated and inaccurate today if they were not adjusted for changes in land use, wildfires, or climate. Understanding where streams are perennial is important for a variety of reasons. For example, perennial streams receive special regulatory protections under a variety of statutes, and provide important habitat for fish, wildlife, and other species. To predict the likelihood that streams are perennial, we compiled nearly 25,000 observations of wet/dry conditions [...]

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Kyle W Blasch
Co-Investigator :
Jason Dunham, John C Risley, Kristin L Jaeger, Thomas R Sando, Daniel Dauwalter
Funding Agency :
Northwest CSC

Attached Files

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Final Report.pdf 938.39 KB application/pdf

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Categories
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Water, Coasts and Ice
Organization
Science Tools For Managers
Science Themes
NCCWSC Science Themes
Science Tools for Managers
Types

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeFinal Report

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