Seeking balance: a climate-responsive water management system for Southern Manitoba’s provincial waterways with Shannon Creek as an exemplar

dc.contributor.authorBoss, Alexandra
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeTrottier, Jean (Landscape Architecture)
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeGunn, Geoffrey (Government of Canada)
dc.contributor.supervisorvan Loon, Frits
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-04T16:51:26Z
dc.date.available2024-01-04T16:51:26Z
dc.date.issued2023-11-30
dc.date.submitted2023-12-01T05:17:52Zen_US
dc.degree.disciplineLandscape Architectureen_US
dc.degree.levelMaster of Landscape Architecture (M.L.Arch.)
dc.description.abstractThis practicum answers the research question, “how to create a climate-responsive water management system within a working agricultural landscape.” Through literature review of the natural and human history, GIS mapping, careful site analysis, and extensive site visits, the landscape’s inherent way of being began to emerge as a path forward for climate resilient provincial waterways. Policy, land use, and crop inventory analysis make the current state clear and existing watershed district / landowner partnerships offer a platform for broader scale interventions. This practicum proposes to use Manitoba’s GROW program as a mechanism to incentivize farmers to adopt the intervention. Provincial waterways were once natural creeks and rivers that have been channelized to assist spring runoff from agricultural fields. These ecologically poor waterways are dozens, if not hundreds, of kilometres long and are maintained by a variety of groups: the province, the rural municipality, or the adjacent landowner. Therefore, an intervention in a waterway must be easy enough to be adopted by this variety of groups but also means the capacity for having a substantial impact on water across the province is markedly increased when compared with a small, single site, intervention. Knowledge gained through background research and on-the-ground site analysis led to a relatively simple intervention that employs three design elements already found in the region: shelterbelts, wetlands, and prairie grasslands. These three elements combine to capture snow and eventual spring melt, create habitat, clean agricultural pollutants from the waterway, and hold water in place, ultimately increasing the water storage capacity of provincial waterways by a significant 70%. This practicum leans on vernacular practice, embraces the inherent extremes of the prairie ecoregion, and offers a way to maintain a productive agricultural landscape while responding to the increasing challenges of the climate crisis.
dc.description.noteFebruary 2024
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/37922
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsopen accessen_US
dc.subjectclimate-responsive
dc.subjectwater management
dc.subjectshelterbelts
dc.subjectwetlands
dc.subjectprairie grasslands
dc.subjectSouthern Manitoba
dc.titleSeeking balance: a climate-responsive water management system for Southern Manitoba’s provincial waterways with Shannon Creek as an exemplar
dc.typemaster thesisen_US
local.subject.manitobayes
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