Under B.C.'s Forest and Range Practices Act Government Actions Regulation, and the Oil and Gas Activities Act Environmental Management and Protection Regulation, watersheds with significant fish values and sensitivity can be designated as fisheries sensitive watersheds (FSWs).
The Forest Planning and Practices Regulation includes objectives for protecting FSWs, as well as conserving water, fish, wildlife and biodiversity within riparian areas in all watersheds.
"Are watersheds adequately protected and managed to maintain the functional processes and habitat needed for the fish and aquatic/riparian ecosystems within them?"
Effectiveness monitoring and assessment is critical for ensuring that activities on the landscape maintain the natural “watershed processes” and “functioning condition” necessary to conserve healthy fish populations and protect habitat. FREP has two different assessments for watersheds:
Both of the options above incorporate riparian, water quality and fish passage/habitat connectivity into the overall evaluation methodology.
The Watershed Status Evaluation Protocol (WSEP) is used to assess the fish habitat status of a fisheries sensitive watershed (FSW), and similarly, of other watersheds with high fish values using a two-step approach:
Together the two provide an assessment of the status of a watershed from a fish (aquatic) habitat perspective. The WSEP has been developed jointly by government and partners through application of the protocol to a variety of watersheds throughout B.C.
Watersheds assessed using the WSEP are published as Watershed Status Evaluation Reports (WSERs).
The Routine-Level Watershed Assessment was developed to give a less rigorous but strategic and effective option to evaluate functioning condition in any watershed of interest by:
The routine-level assessment is described in Technical Guidance # 7 and the report detailing pilot testing of the assessment can be found in FREP Report #41.