Watershed analysis and watershed management are developing
as tools of integrated ecological and economic study and decision
making at a regional scale. The new technology and thinking brought
with the advent of Internet and the World Wide Web (WWW) is very
much complimentary to some of the paradigms of watershed analysis.
The watershed management approach has emerged as
a holistic and integral way of research, analysis and decision
making in a watershed scale. The major impetus of watershed management
stems from the understanding that science needs to be linked to
planning, and that decision making should be based on broad citizens
involvement. In both cases it is important that the information
be shared between the stake holders and that it be processed into
a format readily percieved by wide and diverse groups, institutions
and individuals.
The fact that
ecosystem management is based on the principle of preserving ecosystem
integrity while maintaining sustainable benefits for human population
(Norton, 1992), implies that the decision making process should
be fundamentally restructured in order to take into account all
the subsystems in their integrity and all the stake holders with
all the diversity of their potentially contradicting interests
and concerns. The complexity of this goal is challenging and it
can be hardly tackled without innovative technology such as computer
modeling and Internet communications.
Computer simulations
and data processing have been widely recognized as imprtant tools for
environmental decision making, however there was always a gap between
the advantages of the Internet for watershed management have not
been adequately discussed.
A watershed management web page can be considered
as a problem oriented web page that contains the state
of the art of data and methods available for decision making in
a particular geographic region of a watershed (Fig. 1). Web pages
of this sort are driven by a certain problem and serve as a means
of interactive communication, rather than passive informing.
The numerous stake-holders and interest groups on
a watershed can represent themselves in separate web pages that
are linked to the root page and cross-referenced when necessary.
They are also invited to submit a brief summary of their activities
and concerns that will be placed on the root page. Already this
stage can be an important part of the consensus building process,
when all the varying concerns get summarized at one web site,
and it is made open for discussion and can be monitoring a corresponding
bulletin-board that serves the purposes of exchanging current
opinions and information on hot issues. Three immediate benefits
of this clearly emerge:
A watershed landscape model, like the PLM described
above, serves as a core of the page, bringing together the geographic,
ecological and socioeconomic data about the watershed and its
subsystems. It also helps identify the gaps in information, and
its data base becomes the reference book and repository for future
research and measurements in the area. It is further linked to
other more detailed models and methods that describe different
processes or phenomena on the watershed and help preprocess and
understand the data.
The social, physical and ecological domains become
essentially linked and counteracting. To make a case, a stake
holder needs physical, socioeconomic or ecological data, which
is readily provided by the watershed data base. He may need to
refer to some modeling or data-processing techniques to illustrate
his point. These methods are also provided from the web, with
applets, that accompany data for simple evaluations, or forms
that can be filed and scenarios that can be ordered from the full-scale
model or its submodules.
The results are immediately posted on the web and
made available for discussion and decision making. The web serves
to integrate the knowledge and data available at different institutions
and sites, and to offer it to the potential user.