让新西兰奥特罗阿的河流重新焕发生机

IF 6.8 1区 地球科学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Water Pub Date : 2022-12-12 DOI:10.1002/wat2.1624
G. Brierley, D. Hikuroa, I. Fuller, J. Tunnicliffe, Kristiann Allen, J. Brasington, H. Friedrich, J. Hoyle, R. Measures
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引用次数: 5

摘要

当代管理实践人为地限制(扼杀)了新西兰奥特罗阿的河流系统,以支持河岸地区的集约化土地利用。这些做法违背了自然规律,削弱了河流的功能和生物多样性价值,也削弱了河流与社会文化之间的关系。河流的限制可以通过促进脆弱地区的发展和限制适应气候变化的灵活性来加剧洪水风险,从而可能加剧未来的灾害。迄今为止,在新西兰奥特罗阿尚未采取旨在解决这些缺点的空间到移动管理干预措施。尽管事实上,这些做法与Māori(土著)将河流视为不可分割的生物实体的概念直接一致。《怀唐伊条约》的义务主张Māori权利以及定居者社会的殖民权利,这为采取空间迁移倡议提供了额外的动力。本文概述了一个生物物理优先级框架,以支持开发和推出与Aotearoa每个河流系统的特征、行为、条件和进化轨迹(恢复潜力)相结合的空间到移动干预措施。
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Reanimating the strangled rivers of Aotearoa New Zealand
Contemporary management practices have artificially confined (strangled) river systems in Aotearoa New Zealand to support intensified land use in riparian areas. These practices work against nature, diminishing the functionality and biodiversity values of living rivers, and associated socio‐cultural relations with rivers. River confinement can accentuate flood risk by promoting development in vulnerable locations and limiting the flexibility to adapt to changing climate, prospectively accentuating future disasters. To date, uptake of space‐to‐move management interventions that seek to address such shortcomings is yet to happen in Aotearoa New Zealand. This is despite the fact that such practices directly align with Māori (indigenous) conceptualizations of rivers as indivisible, living entities. Treaty of Waitangi obligations that assert Māori rights alongside colonial rights of a settler society provide an additional driver for uptake of space‐to‐move initiatives. This article outlines a biophysical prioritization framework to support the development and roll out of space‐to‐move interventions in ways that work with the character, behavior, condition, and evolutionary trajectory (recovery potential) of each river system in Aotearoa.
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来源期刊
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Water
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Water Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
16.60
自引率
3.70%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: The WIREs series is truly unique, blending the best aspects of encyclopedic reference works and review journals into a dynamic online format. These remarkable resources foster a research culture that transcends disciplinary boundaries, all while upholding the utmost scientific and presentation excellence. However, they go beyond traditional publications and are, in essence, ever-evolving databases of the latest cutting-edge reviews.
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