Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado State University, 1372 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, CO, 80523, USA.
School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, University of Melbourne, 500 Yarra Blvd, Burnley, 3121, VIC, Australia.
J Environ Manage. 2022 Nov 15;322:115862. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115862. Epub 2022 Aug 29.
The services that rivers provide and how they affect the landscape plays a dominate role in urban planning and development. Urban riverscapes, which consist of stream channels, their floodplains, biotic communities, and manmade features, are complex social-ecological and hydrogeomorphic systems. Yet, despite recognition of their place and value, rivers are often degraded in urban settings. Successfully managing urban riverscapes requires improved methods to assess them and to more effectively link stressors to values, and to incorporate these considerations in planning. Assessment of urban riverscapes' physical condition and function-a hydrogeomorphic assessment-is necessary to make these links, and inform more appropriate management strategies for sustainable and valued riverscape systems. The framework and methods used for such an assessment should be appropriate to the urban context, insofar as they are applicable to a range of streams from lightly degraded to highly utilized or constructed. Above all, the framework must prioritize the connection of human communities to riverscapes. In this article, we outline a framework for urban riverscape assessment which considers four facets of urban riverscapes: human values, hydrology, geomorphology, and ecology. The four facets, assessed across multiple nested scales, provide a flexible basis for context-driven hydrogeomorphic assessment, which is vital to informing better planning and management of urban riverscapes. The framework can be integrated with other facets (e.g. geochemical, aquatic ecology) depending on the scope of the assessment. By linking intrinsic, relational, and use-based values to physical conditions, watershed managers can select relevant and measurable indicators that directly inform interventions in the riverscape, catchment, or urban zones to improve riverscape function and urban vitality through planning mechanisms. This assessment framework facilitates dialogue between managers, practitioners, scientists, and the community; enabling technical and non-technical inputs to the development of assessment criteria, and a shared vision to inform targets and goals.
河流提供的服务以及它们对景观的影响在城市规划和发展中起着主导作用。由河道、洪泛区、生物群落和人工设施组成的城市河流景观是复杂的社会-生态和水文地貌系统。然而,尽管人们认识到河流的地位和价值,但在城市环境中,河流往往会遭到破坏。成功管理城市河流景观需要改进的方法来评估它们,并更有效地将压力源与价值联系起来,并将这些考虑纳入规划中。对城市河流景观的物理状况和功能(水文学地貌评估)进行评估是建立这些联系的必要条件,并为可持续和有价值的河流景观系统提供更合适的管理策略。用于此类评估的框架和方法应适合城市背景,只要它们适用于从轻度退化到高度利用或建设的一系列溪流。最重要的是,该框架必须优先考虑将人类社区与河流景观联系起来。在本文中,我们概述了一个城市河流景观评估框架,该框架考虑了城市河流景观的四个方面:人类价值观、水文学、地貌学和生态学。这四个方面在多个嵌套尺度上进行评估,为基于上下文的水文学地貌评估提供了灵活的基础,这对于为城市河流景观的规划和管理提供更好的信息至关重要。该框架可以根据评估的范围与其他方面(例如地球化学、水生生态学)相结合。通过将内在、关系和基于使用的价值与物理条件联系起来,流域管理者可以选择相关且可衡量的指标,这些指标可以直接为河流景观、集水区或城市区域的干预措施提供信息,以通过规划机制改善河流景观功能和城市活力。该评估框架促进了管理者、从业者、科学家和社区之间的对话;使技术和非技术投入能够参与评估标准的制定,并形成共同的愿景,为目标和指标提供信息。