Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1975
Citation Wilford, D.J., M.E. Sakals, W.W. Grainger, T.H. Millard, and T.R. Giles. 2009. Managing forested watersheds for hydrogeomorphic risks on fans. B.C. Min. For. Range, For. Sci. Prog., Victoria, B.C. Land Manag. Handb. 61.
Organization FLNRO
URL http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hfd/pubs/docs/Lmh/Lmh61.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords Fans are linked to their watersheds by hydrogeomorphic
processesラ?oods, debris ?oods, and debris
?ows. These processes move water, sediment, and
debris from the hillslopes of a watershed through
channels to the fan. Fans in British Columbia are
often the site of residential developments, and transportation
and utility corridors, as well as high-value
habitat for ?sh and high-productivity growing sites
for forests. Collectively, these features are termed
モelements-at-riskヤ because they may be vulnerable
to watershed-generated hydrogeomorphic processes
that issue onto the fan. These processes may be natural
or result from land use activities, and can cause
the partial or total loss of some or all of the elements
on the fan.
In British Columbia, forest harvesting and road
building is associated with increased hydrogeomorphic
hazards. The downstream effects of these forestry
activities in source areas may be far-reaching
and extend beyond the scope of conventional siteoriented
planning. A ?ve-step approach is presented
to assist land managers undertake risk analyses and
assessments that place their proposed developments
within the watershed-fan system. The ?ve steps are:
1) identify fans and delineate watersheds; 2) identify
elements-at-risk on fans; 3) investigate fan processes;
4) investigate watershed processes; and 5) analyze
risks and develop plans. This scheme is applicable to
forested watersheds throughout British Columbia.
Information Type report
Regional Watershed All
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Dave Wilford
Contact Email [email protected]