Innovation in Rainwater Management
"Rapid urban expansion, increased traffic, ageing infrastructure, greater
climatic variability, and the need for enhanced sustainability of urban water
resources pose significant challenges to conventional stormwater management,"
states Dr. Hans Schreier of the University of British
Columbia.
"Innovative approaches are needed in order to mitigate the risk of flooding,
pollution, and aquatic ecosystem degradation, and enhance beneficial uses of
urban waters."
"To examine such approaches, a series of three regional conferences on
innovative rainwater/stormwater management were held in Vancouver, Calgary, and
Toronto during 2007 to 2008 under the sponsorship of the Canadian Water Network
(CWN) and the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC)."
"The programs for each of these regional events included a presentation on the
Urban Forest Research Project that was implemented in Metro Vancouver
during the 2005 - 2010 period. The resulting paper was co-authored by Dr. Markus
Weiler and Yeganeh Asadian."
A New Approach
"Interception loss plays an important role in controlling the water balance
of a watershed, especially where urban development has taken place. The aim of the Urban Forest Research Project was to
illustrate the importance of urban trees as a form of ‘green infrastructure’
where they reduce rainwater runoff and rainwater intensity. In addition, trees
cause a delay in precipitation reaching the ground," states Dr. Markus
Weiler, former Chair of Forest Hydrology at UBC. He was responsible for the
developing the research approach.
"We studied the interception loss in the North Shore of British Columbia. We
applied a unique methodology for measuring throughfall under six different urban
trees using a system of long polyvinyl chloride pipes hung beneath the canopy
capturing the throughfall and draining it to a rain gauge attached to a data
logger," continues Yeganeh Asadian. She completed the research and analysis
in fulfillment of her Master's thesis.
"We selected different tree species in variable landscape sites (streets,
parks, and natural forested areas) and elevations to ensure that the system
adequately captured the throughfall variability."
TO LEARN MORE: To download a copy of the paper by Yeganeh Asadian and Dr. Markus Weiler,
click on A New Approach in Measuring Rainfall Interception by Urban Trees in Coastal British Columbia.
For an overview of the papers presented at the conference series, click on Innovation in Stormwater Management in Canada: The Way Forward to download a paper
co-authored by Hans Schreier and Jiri Marsalek, series organizers.
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