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A controlling factor approach to estuary classification
Authors:Terry M. Hume   Ton Snelder   Mark Weatherhead  Rick Liefting
Affiliation:aNational Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd., P.O. Box 11-115, Hamilton, New Zealand;bNational Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd., P.O. Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand;cTonkin and Taylor Ltd., P.O. Box 9544, Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract:A new approach to the classification of estuaries is described. The estuary environment classification (EEC) is based on a hierarchical view of the abiotic components that comprise the environments of estuaries. The EEC postulates that climate, oceanic, riverine and catchment factors ‘control’ a hierarchy of processes and broadly determine the physical and biological characteristics of estuaries. The classification differentiates estuaries at four levels of detail. Level 1 differentiates global scale variation based on differences in climatic and oceanic processes, which are discriminated by the factors: latitude, oceanic basins and large landmasses. Level 2 differentiates variation in estuary hydrodynamic processes, which are discriminated by estuary basin morphometry, river and oceanic forcing. Level 3 differentiates variation among estuaries that are due to catchment processes, which are discriminated by catchment geology and catchment land cover. The approach has been applied to all the estuaries in New Zealand using existing data sources. Estuaries were assigned class membership at each level of the classification by applying criteria in the form of decision rules to the database of assignment characteristics. GIS was then used to map the estuaries with classes being defined by colour at any level of the classification. The resulting map provides a multi-scale spatial framework that is suitable for many environmental or conservation management applications.
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