Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 5 Next »

Introduction

The Environmental Demand Model (EDM) in Source operates on a daily basis generating demands and extracting water to meet these demands using the environmental demand and supply point node. The model can be applied in both regulated and unregulated systems. 

Table 1 shows the different objectives that can be achieved using the EDM using a set of flow rules. These rules can be grouped and prioritised to ensure that the required environmental needs are met. The Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder Framework (shown in Table 1), which determines environmental watering actions whereby watering options for a specific asset are a function of water availability.

 Extreme dryDryMedianWet
Ecological watering objectivesAvoid damage to key environmental assetsEnsure ecological capacity for recoveryMaintain ecological health and resilienceImprove and extend healthy and resilient aquatic ecosystems

Management objectives

  • Avoid critical loss of threatened species
  • Maintain key refuges
  • Avoid irretrievable damage or catastrophic events
  • Support the survival and growth of threatened species and communities including limited small scale recruitment
  • Maintain deiverse habitats
  • Maintain low flow river and floodplain functional processes in sites and reaches of priority assets
  • Enable growth, reproduction and small-scale recruitment for a diverse range of flora and fauna
  • Promote low-lying floodplain-river connectivity
  • Support medium flow river and floodplain functional processes
  • Enable growth, reproduction and large-scale recruitment for a diverse range of flora and fauna
  • Promote higher floodplain-river connectivity
  • Support high flow river and floodplain functional processes
Management actions
  • Water refugia and sites supporting threatened species and communities
  • Undertake emergency watering at specific sites of priority assets
  • Use carryover volumes to maintain critical needs
  • Water refugia and sites supporting threatened species and communities
  • Provide low flow and freshes in sites and reaches of priority assets
  • Use carryover volumes to maintain follow-up watering
  • Prolong flood/high-flow duration at key sites and reaches of priority assets
  • Contribute to the full-range of in-channel flows
  • Use carryover to provide optimal seasonal flow patterns in subsequent years
  • Increase flood/high-flow duration and extent across priority assets
  • Contribute to the full range of flows including over-bank
  • Use carryover to provide optimal seasonal flow patterns in subsequent years
Key goalDamage avoidanceCapacity for recoveryMaintained health and resilienceImproved health and resilience

Flow rules

The EDM  provides a means of capturing prescriptive descriptions of water patterns that the environment requires. These definitions of watering patterns are captured as ‘flow rules’ within the EDM and many combinations of flow rules can be prescribed for a single supply point. The four types of flow rules presented in the EDM have been designed to capture the most commonly defined environmental flow requirements specified in environmental flow studies and water regulations. These environmental demand rules allow you to construct a collective environmental water requirement by using combinations of environmental demand rules. These are:

  • Flood/Fresh - specifies a flood fresh, usually associated with a recruitment event such as to trigger fish movement, water floodplain vegetation;
  • Flow pattern - specifies a pattern of flow, used to define multi-peak events;
  • Minimum - specifies a minimum flow, usually applied to maintain minimum habitat requirements; and
  • Translucency - specifies the flow requirements in terms of some other time series, usually the release from a dam based on the inflow of the dam.

These rules are configured in the environmental demand node's feature editor. For details on what to configure each of these rules in Source, refer to Environmental Demand node.

To combine the flow rules into a collective environmental flow requirement, rules can be grouped so that they are either always considered, or considered as a subset of the flow requirements. You can define the priority order of rules, and where there is a conflict in being able to meet the water demand, ( ie. insufficient availability of water) the additional water demands for the lowest priority rule is removed until the demand matches, or is less than the available water.

Rules can be made active or inactive during a modelling run using Disable in the rule's contextual menu.

  • No labels