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Supporting proactive planning for climate change adaptation and conservation using an attributed road-river structure dataset

Authors :
Stephanie R. Januchowski-Hartley
Sayali K. Pawar
Xiao Yang
Michiel Jorissen
Rochelle Bristol
Sukhmani Mantel
James C. White
Fraser A. Januchowski-Hartley
José V. Roces-Díaz
Carlos Cabo Gomez
Maria Pregnolato
Source :
Januchowski-Hartley, S R, Pawar, S K, Yang, X, Jorissen, M, Bristol, R, Mantel, S, White, J C, Januchowski-Hartley, F A, Roces-Díaz, J V, Gomez, C C & Pregnolato, M 2022, ' Supporting proactive planning for climate change adaptation and conservation using an attributed road-river structure dataset ', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 321, 115959 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115959, Scopus
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Freshwater species and their habitats, and transportation networks are at heightened risk from changing climate and are priorities for adaptation, with the sheer abundance and individuality of road-river structures complicating mitigation efforts. We present a new spatial dataset of road-river structures attributed as culverts, bridges, or fords, and use this along with data on gradient and stream order to estimate structure sensitivity and exposure in and out of special areas of conservation (SAC) and built-up areas to determine vulnerability to damage across river catchments in Wales, UK. We then assess hazard of flooding likelihood at the most vulnerable structures to determine those posing high risk of impact on roads and river-obligate species (fishes and mussels) whose persistence depends on aquatic habitat connectivity. Over 5% (624/11,680) of structures are high vulnerability and located where flooding hazard is highest, posing high risk of impact to roads and river-obligate species. We assess reliability of our approach through an on-ground survey in a river catchment supporting an SAC and more than 40% (n = 255) of high-risk structures, and show that of the subset surveyed >50% had obvious physical degradation, streambank erosion, and scouring. Our findings help us to better understand which structures pose high-risk of impact to river-obligate species and humans with increased flooding likelihood.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Januchowski-Hartley, S R, Pawar, S K, Yang, X, Jorissen, M, Bristol, R, Mantel, S, White, J C, Januchowski-Hartley, F A, Roces-Díaz, J V, Gomez, C C & Pregnolato, M 2022, ' Supporting proactive planning for climate change adaptation and conservation using an attributed road-river structure dataset ', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 321, 115959 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115959, Scopus
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....297c7d03ccfd12d94c000bc9af07266c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115959