+ All Categories
Home > Science > Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Date post: 21-Jan-2015
Category:
Upload: james-snider
View: 88 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Presentation at the Genomes to Biomes 2014 joint meeting of the Canadian Society of Ecology and Evolution, Canadian Society of Zoology, and the Limnology Society of Canada.
32
© Greg Stott/WWF-Canada Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017 Genomes to/aux Biomes, 2014 1 James Snider, Sophie Taddeo, Anna Labetski & Steven Price May 28, 2014
Transcript
Page 1: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

© G

reg

Sto

tt/W

WF

-Ca

nada

Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Genomes to/aux Biomes, 2014

1

James Snider, Sophie Taddeo, Anna Labetski & Steven Price

May 28, 2014

Page 2: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

What is it all adding up to?

2

Page 3: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Freshwater Health Assessment (FHA): What is it?

• A set of four key metrics integrated through an expert reviewed analytical framework

• Provide a high level score for freshwater ecosystem health within a watershed context.

• Establish a consistent approach across the country

• Pooling available data to build a basis for evidence-based water policy evaluation and advocacy.

3

Page 4: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

4

All major freshwater systems assessed by

by 2017

A major milestone….

Page 5: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Index of Habitat Integrity (IHI)

South African Scoring System (SASS)(Macro-Invertebrate Community Index)

Fish Assemblage Integrity Index (FAII)

Riparian Vegetation Index (RVI)

Geomorphological Index

Water Quality (Chemical) Water Quality (Diatoms)

Concept: Looking to leaders

Page 6: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017
Page 7: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Complimenting other assessments

7

Page 8: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

© G

art

h LE

NZ

/ W

WF

-Can

ada

WWF-Canada Freshwater Health Assessment Framework

Page 9: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

9

Page 10: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

10

Hydrology Metric -- Composite metric comprised of 5 indicators:

1. Trends in median monthly flow, long-term (onset of monitoring – present)

2. Trends in median monthly flow, short-term (last available monitoring – present)

Page 11: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

11

3. Long-term trends in annual flowsSub-basin score reported as average annual percentage change in MAF, calculated across sites with significant trend, and weighted across sites by long-term MAD.

Hydrology Metric -- Composite metric comprised of 5 indicators:

Page 12: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

12

Hydrology Metric

Pre- vs. Post-Dam / Historical vs. Recent analysis:

4. Variance in monthly flow

5. Percentage Change in Median Monthly Flow

-- Composite metric comprised of 5 indicators:

Page 13: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

13Concentration (mg/L)

Num

ber o

f Obs

erva

tions

Provincial Guideline (e.g. Nitrate = 2.93 mg/L)

75th Percentile 90th Percentile

Water Quality

Indicator: Proportion of water quality measurements that exceed three chosen thresholds: (1) Provincial or Federal water quality guidelines; (2) 90th percentile of historical distribution; and (3) 75th percentile of historical distribution

Various data sources, including Environment Canada’s EnviroDat, and provincial agencies (e.g. Ontario’s Provincial Water Quality Monitoring Network)

Page 14: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

14

Example Results of Water Quality Metric:

Page 15: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

15

Water quality results are available by parameter, and data source

Page 16: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

HBI = Σ(xi*ti)/(n), where

xi = number of individuals within a familyti = tolerance value of a familyn = total number of organisms in the sample

Dragonfly Nymph CaddisflySnailsSideswimmer

Hilsenhoff Biotic Index

A measure of benthic invertebrate community composition, based on relative sensitivity of taxa (i.e. species, genus or family) to disturbance (e.g. Organic pollutants).

Page 17: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Year

Med

ian

Num

ber o

f Nati

ve F

ish

Spec

ies

Linear Regression*

* All statistics used in FHA are non-parametric. We use the analogous non-parametric test

10

6

2

1995 2000 2005 2010

Fish MetricIndicator: Presence/Absence of a decline in native fish species richness over time (i.e. Loss of native fish diversity)

Data Sources: Provincial databases, including BC Historical Fish Observances, Alberta’s Fish & Wildlife Information System, Ontario’s Flowing Waters Information System

Analysis of both median and total annual fish species richness

Page 18: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

18

Very Good

Good

Very Good

Very Good

Your water body is: GOOD

Very poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very good

WWF Framework: Metrics to Scores

Page 19: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Health of your water body overall is:

GOOD Very Poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very Good

WWF Framework: Metrics to Scores

Hydrology

Fish

Invertebrates

Water Quality

Very Poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very Good

=

=

=

=

=

Data sufficiency

Very Poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very Good

Very Poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very Good

Very Poor

Poor

Fair

Good

Very Good

Page 20: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Understanding scale

20

Spatial criteria for data sufficiency are determined based on Water Survey of Canada framework:

For basins, criteria are related to ‘sub-drainage areas“

For sub-basins, criteria are related to “sub-sub-drainage areas”

Page 21: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

21http://wwf.ca/waterhealth

Page 22: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Upcoming results:June, 2014 – Five rivers

22

• Ottawa

• North Saskatchewan

• Mackenzie

• Rivers of the Great Slave

• Saint-Maurice

Page 23: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

Overall Scores, sub-basin scale

2

16

7

3

0

21

Page 24: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

0

8

24

12

1

4

Very Good Good Fair Poor Very Poor DataDeficient

Hydrology Scores, Sub-basin scale

382 short-term monitoring sites86 long-term monitoring sites

Number of sub-basins in each scoring category:

Page 25: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

7

24

20 0

16

Very Good Good Fair Poor Very Poor DataDeficient

Water Quality Scores, Sub-basin scale

985 Water Quality Sites

Number of sub-basins in each scoring category:

Page 26: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

11

34

21

28

Very Good Good Fair Poor Very Poor DataDeficient

Benthic Scores, Sub-basin scale

Number of sub-basins in each scoring category:

809 Benthic Sites

Page 27: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

28

0 0

21

Good Fair Poor Data Deficient

Fish Scores, Sub-basin scale

Number of sub-basins in each scoring category:

5,382 Fish Sites

Page 28: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

28

Working to improve the fish metric

1. Apply abundance-based regional Indices of Biological Integrity, where data and models of expected distribution and abundance exists.

2. Where long-term abundance data is available (but not a regional IBI model), apply WWF’s Living Planet Index approach.

Page 29: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

29

Fish Metric Improvements (cont.)

4. Integrate a measure of sampling effort into analysis, either via species rarefaction models, or catch-per-unit-effort approaches.

Page 30: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

30

Conclusions to Date

• Severe data limitations are apparent in many parts of the country.

• Lack of standardized approach for reporting, especially water quality – including state and units of parameters.

• Challenge accessing data outside of government.

• Huge potential in monitoring from industry (EIA), utilities (e.g. BC Hydro and Hydro Quebec).

• Improvements are needed in fish metric to gain better discriminatory power.

Page 31: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

31

Next steps

• Freshwater Health Assessment for Great Lakes - St. Lawrence River Watershed – to be completed by June 2015

• Threats Assessment – cumulative effects approach to provide additional insight on causality & enhance policy & planning leverage

• Hiring: Two, 1-year contract positions, starting Summer and Fall 2014.

Page 32: Reporting the first year of results towards a Canada-wide evaluation of freshwater health by 2017

wwf.ca

Thank you

32

James [email protected]

@snider_james


Recommended