Science and Research

There is a good level of understanding of the local hydrological effects of most NFM measures. However, the wider hydrological impacts of NFM measures at the catchment scale are less clear. This topic includes research on the effects of NFM, as well as research that supports delivery, such as social research on land managers attitudes to NFM or barriers to implementation. Scientific research is available in all forms and scales, for example, from empirical studies to new modelling tools and from the plot scale to the full catchment scale.

Eddleston Project wins two top UK awards from CIEEM

The Eddleston Water project won two awards at the Chartered Institute of Ecology & Environmental Management's 2023 Awards ceremony in Birmingham on 28th June. Competing against a wealth of other excellent projects, Tweed Forum and its partners' study of the effectiveness of natural flood management won the CIEEM Best Practice Award for Large-Scale Practical Nature Conservation.

Survey on Natural Flood Management skills

The Environment Agency have commissioned Qa Research to research NFM training needs amongst people with a role in NFM in England. The Environment Agency wants to ensure that everyone involved in NFM has the skills, knowledge and expertise they need. Therefore this survey has been constructed to understand where there is a need for training for those who have a role in NFM to inform the development and availability of suitable training.

Peatland ACTION - films now available on YouTube

Peatland ACTION has recently launched a suite of films to help encourage more landowners to get involved in peatland restoration, and promote the value of the work that peatland contractors do to make that happen. The films can be accessed via a dedicated YouTube channel (via link below). There are a series of films which cover topics such as the land managers' view, about peatland contractors and also case study examples.

River Restoration Centre - upcoming training courses

The River Restoration Centre (RRC) have a long history of running river related training events (inc. on the topic of NFM). The RRC have just released a number of training events that will take place over the next 6-months. These included courses on river erosion management and restoring river floodplain systems. There is a mix of in-person and virtual training events. More information on the training courses can be found by clicking the link below. 

Field visit of Japanese catchment Research team to Eddleston

On 14th March, The Eddlston Water project was visited by a tem of 14 researchers from 4 universities across Japan who together work on a catchment approach to flood risk management. Representing a variety of disciplines, the research team is led by Yukihiro Shimatani, Distinguished Professor at the Prefectural University of Kumamoto and are conducting catchment-based flood management research in Japan. In recent years, Japan has experienced major floods, possibly due to climate change, and flood control measures that target river basins are being seen as necessary.

Scottish FRM2023 Conference - conference outputs

The Scottish FRM2023 Conference took place in Perth in February this year. The topic of the conference was "Water Resilient Places". It was a 2-day conference which over 200 people attended (both in person and online). There were 59 speakrs and a number of workshops. A theme of one session was on Nature-Based Solutions (inc. NFM). All the slides and videos of the presentations are now available on Sniffer's website (see link below). They have a dedicated Vimeo channel hosting the session recordings.

Eddleston Water designated UNESCO Ecohydrology Demonstration Site

The Eddleston Water project, Tweed Forum and Scottish Government's long-running empirical study of the effectiveness of Natural Flood Management (NFM) has just been designated by UNESCO as one of their new Ecohydrology Demonstration sites, becoming the first one in the UK to achieve this recognition. The project is in its 13th year of operation and will now be included as a Demonstration Site in the UNESCO Intergovernmental Hydrological Programme (IHP), part of the intergovernmental UN system that’s dedicate

Paper published reviewing temporary storage areas in headwaters

A focus review paper on mitigating floods and attenuating surface runoff with temporary storage areas (TSAs) in headwaters has been published in the journal WIRES (Wiley Interdiciplinary Reviews) Waters. TSAs represent a category of soft-engineered nature-based solutions that can provide dispersed, small-scale storage throughout a catchment.  Measures include e.g., bunds, offline ponds and leaky barriers. This open access paper focuses on the role of relatively small-scale (<10,000 m3) TSAs in headwater catchments for flood risk management. 

This report (published by CREW) provides a review and analysis of information on the passage by fish at wooden obstacles (woody placements), used for flood management, in Scotland. 
What can be learnt from working with a community to identify what flood risk management measures are needed, are acceptable and which deliver the greatest multiple benefits?
Effect of soil structure and field drainage on water quality and flood risks (report by CREW)
A short policy paper by CREW detailing the issues managers come up against when implementing NFM in relation to UK reservoir legislation.  Information is sought on whether these issues still apply under the new Reservoirs Act.