The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)

Environmental flows assessment in eastern Canada, and particularly in the province of Quebec, is mainly based on hydrological assessment of historical data during low flow periods. The mean 7-day low flow with return periods of two (7Q2) and ten years (7Q10) are two flow metrics currently used by th...

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Autores principales: Laureline Berthot, André St-Hilaire, Daniel Caissie, Nassir El-Jabi, Judith Kirby, Sébastien Ouellet-Proulx
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Publicado: Elsevier 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:20c98126dea243dd900882ede744caa72021-12-01T05:01:52ZThe use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)1470-160X10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108283https://doaj.org/article/20c98126dea243dd900882ede744caa72021-12-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X21009481https://doaj.org/toc/1470-160XEnvironmental flows assessment in eastern Canada, and particularly in the province of Quebec, is mainly based on hydrological assessment of historical data during low flow periods. The mean 7-day low flow with return periods of two (7Q2) and ten years (7Q10) are two flow metrics currently used by the Quebec Department of Environment and Fight against Climate Change to prescribe minimum flow and/or maximum water abstraction while maintaining the functions and health of riverine ecosystems. This study investigated the use of the wetted perimeter as an additional environmental flows assessment method. This tool can be used by water managers to maintain the availability of river habitats during low flow periods. Twenty flow metrics were computed for inter-annual, summer and winter periods, for 43 sites from 35 rivers, and analysed to study the changes in wetted perimeter with flow. In addition, the flow associated with maximum curvature (breakpoint) of the flow-wetted perimeter function (QMC) was analyzed. Results provided a better understanding of local changes of river hydraulics and possible aquatic habitat availability associated with different flow metrics. The relevance of using a wetted perimeter threshold (WPSQMC) combined with flow thresholds (Tennant method) was also discussed. The two “fair” Tennant flow thresholds, apart from the twenty flow metrics, would provide sufficient available habitat all year long with corresponding WPSQMC thresholds of 88% and 95% of the 43 river sites. The median discharge for August flow metric for summer and the median discharge for the month with the lowest flow metric value for winter (usually February), provided the highest wetted perimeter in relative terms (72% and 79% respectively of the river sites) compared to the WPSQMC threshold. Using the 7Q2 flow metric would mean maintaining sufficient available habitat for 50%, 60% and 72% of the river sites for respectively inter-annual, summer and winter periods. Considering the single WPSQMC threshold, its associated flow provided the highest values for 16% of the river sites and the second highest one for 9% of the river sites with a single seasonal flow metric value high enough for summer or winter. This study showed that the wetted perimeter is a tool providing additional information on both river morphology and changes in potential aquatic habitat as a function of flow for river sites with small catchment size and low mean annual flow values. Indeed, the wetted perimeter can be very useful in the overall assessment of environmental flows.Laureline BerthotAndré St-HilaireDaniel CaissieNassir El-JabiJudith KirbySébastien Ouellet-ProulxElsevierarticleEnvironmental flowsWetted perimeterWater sharing policySouthern Quebec riversEcologyQH540-549.5ENEcological Indicators, Vol 132, Iss , Pp 108283- (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Environmental flows
Wetted perimeter
Water sharing policy
Southern Quebec rivers
Ecology
QH540-549.5
spellingShingle Environmental flows
Wetted perimeter
Water sharing policy
Southern Quebec rivers
Ecology
QH540-549.5
Laureline Berthot
André St-Hilaire
Daniel Caissie
Nassir El-Jabi
Judith Kirby
Sébastien Ouellet-Proulx
The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
description Environmental flows assessment in eastern Canada, and particularly in the province of Quebec, is mainly based on hydrological assessment of historical data during low flow periods. The mean 7-day low flow with return periods of two (7Q2) and ten years (7Q10) are two flow metrics currently used by the Quebec Department of Environment and Fight against Climate Change to prescribe minimum flow and/or maximum water abstraction while maintaining the functions and health of riverine ecosystems. This study investigated the use of the wetted perimeter as an additional environmental flows assessment method. This tool can be used by water managers to maintain the availability of river habitats during low flow periods. Twenty flow metrics were computed for inter-annual, summer and winter periods, for 43 sites from 35 rivers, and analysed to study the changes in wetted perimeter with flow. In addition, the flow associated with maximum curvature (breakpoint) of the flow-wetted perimeter function (QMC) was analyzed. Results provided a better understanding of local changes of river hydraulics and possible aquatic habitat availability associated with different flow metrics. The relevance of using a wetted perimeter threshold (WPSQMC) combined with flow thresholds (Tennant method) was also discussed. The two “fair” Tennant flow thresholds, apart from the twenty flow metrics, would provide sufficient available habitat all year long with corresponding WPSQMC thresholds of 88% and 95% of the 43 river sites. The median discharge for August flow metric for summer and the median discharge for the month with the lowest flow metric value for winter (usually February), provided the highest wetted perimeter in relative terms (72% and 79% respectively of the river sites) compared to the WPSQMC threshold. Using the 7Q2 flow metric would mean maintaining sufficient available habitat for 50%, 60% and 72% of the river sites for respectively inter-annual, summer and winter periods. Considering the single WPSQMC threshold, its associated flow provided the highest values for 16% of the river sites and the second highest one for 9% of the river sites with a single seasonal flow metric value high enough for summer or winter. This study showed that the wetted perimeter is a tool providing additional information on both river morphology and changes in potential aquatic habitat as a function of flow for river sites with small catchment size and low mean annual flow values. Indeed, the wetted perimeter can be very useful in the overall assessment of environmental flows.
format article
author Laureline Berthot
André St-Hilaire
Daniel Caissie
Nassir El-Jabi
Judith Kirby
Sébastien Ouellet-Proulx
author_facet Laureline Berthot
André St-Hilaire
Daniel Caissie
Nassir El-Jabi
Judith Kirby
Sébastien Ouellet-Proulx
author_sort Laureline Berthot
title The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
title_short The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
title_full The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
title_fullStr The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
title_full_unstemmed The use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in Southern Quebec rivers (Canada)
title_sort use of wetted perimeter as habitat proxy to assess environmental flows in southern quebec rivers (canada)
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/20c98126dea243dd900882ede744caa7
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