2002
DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-1688.2002.tb04344.x
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MULTISCALE RIVER ENVIRONMENT CLASSIFICATION FOR WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT1

Abstract: River Environment Classification (REC) is a new system for classifying river environments that is based on climate, topography, geology, and land cover factors that control spatial patterns in river ecosystems. REC builds on existing principles for environmental regionalization and introduces three specific additions to the “ecoregion” approach. First, the REC assumes that ecological patterns are dependent on a range of factors and associated landscape scale processes, some of which may show significant variat… Show more

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Cited by 306 publications
(278 citation statements)
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“…Hydrological classification is now widespread (Hannah, et al, 2000;Snelder and Biggs, 2002) although the integration with ecological data is rare but an essential process for true hydroecological investigations (Hannah, et al, 2004). The results of this research demonstrate the importance of recognising rivers with different hydrological regimes and the dominance of flow magnitude (monthly and annual extremes) in shaping instream communities in England and Wales.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Hydrological classification is now widespread (Hannah, et al, 2000;Snelder and Biggs, 2002) although the integration with ecological data is rare but an essential process for true hydroecological investigations (Hannah, et al, 2004). The results of this research demonstrate the importance of recognising rivers with different hydrological regimes and the dominance of flow magnitude (monthly and annual extremes) in shaping instream communities in England and Wales.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The controlling factors selected for the implementation of REC-Chile are based on those used in the REC developed by Snelder and Biggs (2002) for New Zealand, adapted to the climatic and environmental conditions of Chile. The controlling factors selected were: Climate, Source of Flow, Geology, Catchment Relative Position, Land Use and Reach Slope.…”
Section: Rec-chile Controlling Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ecoregions are homogeneous zones with regard to certain characteristics or parameters on a determined spatial scale (Snelder et al 2005;Omernik & Bailey 1997;Bailey et al 1978). Snelder and Biggs (2002) pointed out that these ecoregions are unable to represent the longitudinal gradients in a river ecosystem, which were synthesized in the River Continuum Concept (Vannote et al 1980); therefore the use of such ecoregions for river classifi cation are limited.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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