In 2006, TNC sought to develop a classification of watershed
units to be used in conservation planning and conservation measures benchmarks
in South America. The objectives of this project were to: Map freshwater
ecological systems at a continental scale for priority setting and conservation
strategy planning, build
freshwater-related datasets for reference and to have a standardized dataset to
perform analysis and perform parallel analyses related to threats assessments,
protected area gap analyses and other applications.
The process that we followed aimed to replicate the
classification methodology proposed by Higgins et al, 2005 (Figure 1). Using
this hierarchical classification system, large classification units known as
ecoregions and medium sized classification units known as Ecological Drainage
Units, were mapped by a team of scientists in the effort published as Abel et
al, 2008. The next logical step was to classify Freshwater Ecological Systems
(a.k.a. Ecosystems). The Higgins et al, 2005 document presents the
classification system, but not the methodology to develop the data or the
classification. Because of this, we tested several options to generate the
units we would use to run the classification of ecosystems. We tested the
Hydrosheds (Lehner, 2008) classification system, but there was no connectivity
among the units to work with this system. We tested generating watersheds at
one size scale, but this only gave us one dimension of the units we needed. We
then tested the Nested Sized Watershed Units Model developed by Fitzhugh (2005,
see Appendix 1). Basically, this system generates watersheds at different sizes
defined by the user. Once these units have been generated, we simply combined
the different sizes to generate one dataset that uses attribute codes to
differentiate the different sizes. We then proceeded to attribute these
watershed units with geo-physical data and run a classification algorithm to
find similarities among the geo-physical characteristics.