Stream habitat analysis using the instream flow incremental methodology. Bovee, K. D., Lamb, B. L., Bartholow, J. M., Stalnaker, C. B., Taylor, J., & Henriksen, J. Technical Report 1998-0004, U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins, CO, 1998. Paper abstract bibtex This document describes the Instream Flow Methodology in its entirety. This also is to serve as a comprehensive introductory textbook on IFIM for training courses as it contains the most complete and comprehensive description of IFIM in existence today. This should also serve as an official guide to IFIM in publication to counteract the misconceptions about the methodology that have pervaded the professional literature since the mid-1980's as this describes IFIM as it is envisioned by its developers. The document is aimed at the decisionmakers of management and allocation of natural resources in providing them an overview; and to those who design and implement studies to inform the decisionmakers. There should be enough background on model concepts, data requirements, calibration techniques, and quality assurance to help the technical user design and implement a cost-effective application of IFIM that will provide policy-relevant information. Some of the chapters deal with basic organization of IFIM, procedural sequence of applying IFIM starting with problem identification, study planning and implementation, and problem resolution.
@techreport{bovee_stream_1998,
address = {Fort Collins, CO},
type = {Federal {Government} {Series}},
title = {Stream habitat analysis using the instream flow incremental methodology},
url = {http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/itr19980004},
abstract = {This document describes the Instream Flow Methodology in its entirety. This also is to serve as a comprehensive introductory textbook on IFIM for training courses as it contains the most complete and comprehensive description of IFIM in existence today. This should also serve as an official guide to IFIM in publication to counteract the misconceptions about the methodology that have pervaded the professional literature since the mid-1980's as this describes IFIM as it is envisioned by its developers. The document is aimed at the decisionmakers of management and allocation of natural resources in providing them an overview; and to those who design and implement studies to inform the decisionmakers. There should be enough background on model concepts, data requirements, calibration techniques, and quality assurance to help the technical user design and implement a cost-effective application of IFIM that will provide policy-relevant information. Some of the chapters deal with basic organization of IFIM, procedural sequence of applying IFIM starting with problem identification, study planning and implementation, and problem resolution.},
number = {1998-0004},
urldate = {2020-02-03},
institution = {U.S. Geological Survey},
author = {Bovee, Ken D. and Lamb, Berton L. and Bartholow, John M. and Stalnaker, Clair B. and Taylor, Jonathan and Henriksen, Jim},
year = {1998},
pages = {138},
}
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