Coupling systematic planning and expert judgement enhances the efficiency of river restoration

Ineffectiveness of current river restoration practices hinders the achievement of ecological quality targets set by country-specific regulations. Recent advances in river restoration help planning efforts more systematically to reach ecological targets at the least costs. However, such approaches ar...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2016-08, Vol.560-561, p.266-273
Hauptverfasser: Langhans, Simone D., Gessner, Jörn, Hermoso, Virgilio, Wolter, Christian
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container_title The Science of the total environment
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creator Langhans, Simone D.
Gessner, Jörn
Hermoso, Virgilio
Wolter, Christian
description Ineffectiveness of current river restoration practices hinders the achievement of ecological quality targets set by country-specific regulations. Recent advances in river restoration help planning efforts more systematically to reach ecological targets at the least costs. However, such approaches are often desktop-based and overlook real-world constraints. We argue that combining two techniques commonly used in the conservation arena - expert judgement and systematic planning – will deliver cost-effective restoration plans with a high potential for implementation. We tested this idea targeting the restoration of spawning habitat, i.e. gravel bars, for 11 rheophilic fish species along a river system in Germany (Havel-Spree rivers). With a group of local fish experts, we identified the location and extent of potential gravel bars along the rivers and necessary improvements to migration barriers to ensure fish passage. Restoration cost of each gravel bar included the cost of the action itself plus a fraction of the cost necessary to ensure longitudinal connectivity by upgrading or building fish passages located downstream. We set restoration targets according to the EU Water Framework Directive, i.e. relative abundance of 11 fish species in the reference community and optimised a restoration plan by prioritising a subset of restoration sites from the full set of identified sites, using the conservation planning software Marxan. Out of the 66 potential gravel bars, 36 sites which were mainly located in the downstream section of the system were selected, reflecting their cost-effectiveness given that fewer barriers needed intervention. Due to the limited overall number of sites that experts identified as being suitable for restoring spawning habitat, reaching abundance-targets was challenged. We conclude that coupling systematic river restoration planning with expert judgement produces optimised restoration plans that account for on-the-ground implementation constraints. If applied, this approach has a high potential to enhance overall efficiency of future restoration efforts. [Display omitted] •River restoration planned systematically often overlooks real-world constraints.•Coupling systematic planning with expert judgement improves on-the-ground application.•We test this targeting fish spawning habitat restoration along a large river system.•Experts identify the extent and location of potential gravel bars and restoration cost.•Marxan prioritises a cost-effec
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subjects Animals
Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
Cost-efficiency
Ecological status
Environmental Restoration and Remediation - methods
Fishes
Germany
Marxan
River restoration planning
Rivers
Spawning habitat
Water Framework Directive
title Coupling systematic planning and expert judgement enhances the efficiency of river restoration
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