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Defining environmentally acceptable flow downstream intake structures in Croatia

Stjepan Mišetić (Elektroprojekt Consulting Engineers, Zagreb, Croatia)
Željko Pavlin (Elektroprojekt Consulting Engineers, Zagreb, Croatia)
Milorad Mrakovčić (College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia)
Vedran Jurić (Elektroprojekt Consulting Engineers, Zagreb, Croatia)

Management of Environmental Quality

ISSN: 1477-7835

Article publication date: 1 October 2003

679

Abstract

Determining minimum water flows that will continuously run through a natural channel downstream of a water intake (Q0) is a multidisciplinary problem. It is, however, not approached in a multidisciplinary way in most countries. This paper offers an overview of the main methods and proposes a practical and environmentally more acceptable way of determining the retained flow, namely the environmentally acceptable flow (EAF). It is proposed that until the conditions are created for use of more complex methods and/or biological response techniques, the EAF be defined by determining whether the retained flow is sufficient for sustaining and developing indigenous wildlife in the streams by ensuring of the essential living conditions for the bioindicator species. The proposed bioindicators are characteristic fish populations of a specific type of stream and stream reaches. Being the final link in the ecological food chain, fish species are reliable indicators of bioecological balance in a stream.

Keywords

Citation

Mišetić, S., Pavlin, Ž., Mrakovčić, M. and Jurić, V. (2003), "Defining environmentally acceptable flow downstream intake structures in Croatia", Management of Environmental Quality, Vol. 14 No. 4, pp. 520-532. https://doi.org/10.1108/14777830310488720

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited

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