- Askarizadeh, Asal;
- Rippy, Megan A;
- Fletcher, Tim D;
- Feldman, David L;
- Peng, Jian;
- Bowler, Peter;
- Mehring, Andrew S;
- Winfrey, Brandon K;
- Vrugt, Jasper A;
- AghaKouchak, Amir;
- Jiang, Sunny C;
- Sanders, Brett F;
- Levin, Lisa A;
- Taylor, Scott;
- Grant, Stanley B
Catchment urbanization perturbs the water and sediment budgets of streams, degrades stream health and function, and causes a constellation of flow, water quality, and ecological symptoms collectively known as the urban stream syndrome. Low-impact development (LID) technologies address the hydrologic symptoms of the urban stream syndrome by mimicking natural flow paths and restoring a natural water balance. Over annual time scales, the volumes of stormwater that should be infiltrated and harvested can be estimated from a catchment-scale water-balance given local climate conditions and preurban land cover. For all but the wettest regions of the world, a much larger volume of stormwater runoff should be harvested than infiltrated to maintain stream hydrology in a preurban state. Efforts to prevent or reverse hydrologic symptoms associated with the urban stream syndrome will therefore require: (1) selecting the right mix of LID technologies that provide regionally tailored ratios of stormwater harvesting and infiltration; (2) integrating these LID technologies into next-generation drainage systems; (3) maximizing potential cobenefits including water supply augmentation, flood protection, improved water quality, and urban amenities; and (4) long-term hydrologic monitoring to evaluate the efficacy of LID interventions.