Managing climate refugia for freshwater fishes under an expanding human footprint
Within the context of climate adaptation planning, the concept of climate refugia has emerged as a potential framework for addressing future threats to cold-water fish populations. Our aim is to evaluate recent cold-water refugia management efforts within the context of human water demand and regulation, resource consumption, and landscape modification. From these case studies, we illustrate tools, principles and guidelines that can be broadly applied. While many early efforts at identifying climate refugia focused on water temperature, significant gains in evaluating other factors and processes regulating cold-water refugia (e.g. stream flow and groundwater withdrawal) are allowing refined mapping and assessment of ecological value. Significant challenges remain for incorporating climate refugia into water quality standards, evaluating trade-offs among policy options, and planning for uncertainty. But with a procedurally-transparent and conceptually-sound framework to build upon, recent efforts illustrate a promising path forward.