Tweed River Basin - Publication List 2017
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Tweed River Basin - Publication List 2017 Compiled by Prof Chris J Spray - July 2017 (please send any corrections and additions to [email protected]) All publications included were either entirely based on work undertaken in the Tweed river basin (Scotland and/or England), or use the Tweed as a significant part of comparative or general research. Peer-reviewed Publications: 2017 Assessment of changes in ecosystem service delivery – a historical perspective on catchment landscapes. Ncube, Spray & Geddes (in review). International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services & Management A cost-benefit analysis of afforestation as a climate change adaptation measure to reduce flood risk. Dittrich, Ball, Spray, Wreford & Moran (in review). Global Environmental Change Legal framing for achieving ‘good ecological status’ for Malaysian rivers: Are there lessons to be learned from the EU water framework directive? Khalid, Mokhtar, Jalil, Rahman & Spray (in press). Ecosystem Services Geological structure as a control on floodplain groundwater dynamics. Ó Dochartaigh, Archer, Peskett, MacDonald, Black, Auton, Merritt, Goody & Bonell (in review). Hydrological Processes Quantitative temporal precipitation estimation: comparison of approaches with analysis of the effect on rainfall-runoff model outputs. Ruman, Krpec, Rusnok, Black & Ball (in review) Hydrology research Community Resilience for a 1.5⁰C World. Fazey, Carmen, Chapin, III, Ross, Williams, Lyon, Connon & Searle (in review). Current Opinion on Environmental Sustainability. Simulating forestry-related natural flood management features (leaky dams and upland afforestation) to assess flood peak impact. Barnes, Lewis, Quinn, Bathurst, Birkinshaw & Black (in prep). Journal of Hydrology. From the What to the How: Community Resilience to Climate Change in Practice. Fazey, Carmen, Rao- Williams, Hodgson, Searle, White, Lyon, Al Waer, Knox & Murray (in prep). Global Environmental Change. Climate disadvantage in Community Resilience. Fazey, Carmen, Rao-Williams, Hodgson, Searle, Lyon, Al Waer, Knox & Murray (in prep). Global Environmental Change Changing macroinvertebrate diversity linked with habitat heterogeneity in re-configured river channels. Dodd, Spray & Quinn (in prep) Using soundscapes to measure physical and biological recovery in restored river sections. Wilson, Dodd & McGregor (in prep) Making water policy work in the United Kingdom: A case study of practical approaches to strengthening complex, multi-tiered systems of water governance. Robins, Burt, Bracken, Boardman & Thompson (2017). Environmental Science & Policy. Vol 71. Pages 41-55 2016 Salmon and sea trout spawning migration in the River Tweed: telemetry-derived insights for management. Gauld, Campbell & Lucas (2016). Hydrobiologia. Vol 767, 111-123. DOI: 10.1007/s10750- 015-2481-0 Working across scales in integrated catchment management: lessons learned for adaptive water governance from regional experiences. Rouillard & Spray (2016). Regional Environmental Change. DOI 10.1007/s10113-016-0988-1. Competing paradigms of flood management in the Scottish/English borderlands. Cook, Forrester, Bracken, Spray & Oughton (2016). Disaster Prevention and Management, vol 25, no. 3, pp. 314-328. DOI: 10.1108/DPM-01-2016-0010 Flood risk management, an approach to managing cross border hazards. Bracken, Oughton, Donaldson, Cook, Forrester, Spray, Cinderby, Passmore & Bissett (2016). Natural Hazards, vol 82, no. Supplement 2, pp. 217-240. DOI: 10.1007/s11069-016-2284-2 An assessment of engineered log jam structures in response to a flood event in an upland gravel-bed river system. Addy & Wilkinson (2016). Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 41, 1658-1670. DOI: 10.1002/esp.3936 Transforming European water governance? EU water framework directive implementation in 13 member states. Jager, Challies, Kochskamper, Newig, Benson, Blackstock, Collins, Ernst, Evers, Feichtinger, Fritsch, Gooch, Grund & ….. von Korff (2016). Water, 8, Article No. 156. 2015 Policy implementation of catchment-scale flood risk management: learning from Scotland and England. Rouillard, Ball, Heal & Reeves (2015). Environmental Science & Policy A comparison of ecosystem services mapping tools for their potential to support planning and decision-making on a local scale. Vorstius & Spray (2015). Ecosystem Services. 15: 75-83. Combining participatory mapping with Q-methodology to map stakeholder perceptions of complex environmental problems. Forrester, Cook, Bracken, Cinderby & Donaldson (2015). Journal of Applied Geography, 56, 199-208. Evaluating wind-induced uncertainty on rainfall measurements by means of CFD modelling and field observations. Pollock, Colli, O’Donnell, Black, Stagnaro, Dutton, Lanza, Quinn & O’Connell (2015). DOI: 10.3929/ethz-a-010549004 Conference: 10th International Workshop on Precipitation in Urban Areas (UrbanRain15), At Pontresina. Participatory research to influence participatory governance: managing relationships with planners. Blackstock, Dinnie, Dilley, Marshall, Dunglinson, Trench, Harper, Finan, MacPherson, Johnston & Griffin (2015). Area, 47, 254-260. Participation-prescription tension in natural resource management: the case of diffuse pollution in Scottish water management. Waylen, Blackstock, Marshall & Dunglinson (2015). Environmental Policy and Governance, 25, 111-124. Spatially weighted functional clustering of river network data. Miller & Scott (2015). Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C: Applies Statistics. Vol 64, 491-506. DOI: 10.1111/rssc.12082 2014 The role of public participation in encouraging changes in rural land use to reduce flood risk. Rouillard, Reeves, Heal & Ball (2014). Land Use Policy. Vol 50. 155-165. Ecosystem Service mapping helping to realise multiple benefits from the land: Methodology and benefits from the Scottish Borders Regional Land Use Pilot. Medcalf, Turton & Small (2014). In: McCracken, ed. Agriculture and the Environment X, Delivering Multiple Benefits from our Land: Sustainable Development in Practice. Proceedings of the SRUC and SEPA Biennial Conference; 2014 April 15-16; Edinburgh. Emerging land use strategy: development of pilot regional land use frameworks - approaches in the two pilot areas Tharme, Birnie, Davidson & Robeson (2014). In: McCracken, ed. Agriculture and the Environment X, Delivering Multiple Benefits from our Land: Sustainable Development in Practice. Proceedings of the SRUC and SEPA Biennial Conference; 2014 April 15-16; Edinburgh. A constant head well permeameter formula comparison: its significance in the estimation of field- saturated hydraulic conductivity in heterogeneous shallow soils. Archer, Bonell, MacDonald & Coles (2014). Hydrology Research, 45 (6). 788-805. 10.2166/nh.2014.159 Natural flood management from the farmer's perspective: criteria that affect uptake. Holstead, Kenyon, Rouillard, Hopkins & Galán-Díaz (2014). J Flood Risk Management. Vol 10, 205-218. Accurate Rainfall Measurement: The Neglected Achilles Heel of Hydro-Meteorology. Pollock, Dutton, Quinn, O’Connell, Wilkinson & Colli (2014). DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.1.1543.5360 Conference: TECO 2014 - WMO Technical conference on meteorological and environmental instruments and methods of observation. St. Petersburg Hybridity of representation: insights from river basin management planning in Scotland. Blackstock, Waylen, Marshall & Dunglinson (2014). Environment and Planning C: Government and Society, 32, 549- 566. 2013 Interrogating Participatory Catchment Organisations: cases from Canada, New Zealand, Scotland and the Scottish–English Borderlands. Cook, Atkinson, Chalmers, Comins, Cooksley, Deans, Fazey, Fenemor, Kesby, Litke, Marshall & Spray (2013). Geographical Journal, vol 179, no. 3, pp. 234-247. DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4959.2012.00492.x River rehabilitation for the delivery of multiple ecosystem services at the river network scale. Gilvear, Spray & Casas-Mulet (2013). Journal of Environmental Management. Vol 126, 30-43. DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2013.03.026 Population differentiation and temporal changes of carotenoid pigments and stable isotope ratios in the offspring of anadromous and non-anadromous trout Salmo trutta. Briers, Waterman, Galt & Campbell (2013). Ecology of Freshwater Fish. Vol 22, 137-144. DOI: 10.1111/eff.12011. Reduced flow impacts salmonid smolt emigration in a river with low-head weirs. Gauld, Campbell & Lucas (2013). Science of the Total Environment. Vol 458-460, 432-443. DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.04.063. The persistence of 'normal' catchment management despite the participatory turn: exploring the power effects of competing frames of reference. Cook, Kesby, Fazey & Spray (2013). Social Studies of Science, vol 43, no. 5, pp. 754-779. DOI: 10.1177/0306312713478670 The relationship of soil and woodland cover to soil hydraulic conductivity and its implication on catchment management in the Scottish Borders. Archer, Bonell, Coles, MacDonald, Auton & Stevenson (2013). Journal of Hydrology, 497. 208-222. 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2013.05.043 2012 Groundwater-surface water interaction in an upland hillslope-floodplain environment, Eddleston, Scotland. Ó Dochartaigh, MacDonald, Archer, Black, Bonell, Auton & Merritt (2012). British Hydrological Society Eleventh National Hydrology Symposium: Hydrology for a Changing World, Dundee. The relationship of forest and improved grassland to soil water storage and its implication on Natural Flood Management in the Scottish Borders. Archer, Bonell, Coles, MacDonald, Stevenson & Hallett