Andrew Fenemor
Landcare Research
32 Papers
216 Citations
Andrew Fenemor is an academic researcher from Landcare Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Integrated catchment management & Stakeholder. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 29 publications.
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Papers
Multi-variable and multi-site calibration and validation of SWAT in a large mountainous catchment with high spatial variability
TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-variable and multi-site approach was adopted for calibration and validation of the Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model for the Motueka catchment, making use of extensive field measurements.
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Modelling Impacts of Land Cover Change on Critical Water Resources in the Motueka River Catchment, New Zealand
TL;DR: In this article, two additional land cover scenarios (a prehistoric land cover and a potential maximum plantation pine cover) were used to evaluate the impacts of land cover change on total water yields, groundwater flow, and quick flow in the Motueka River catchment, New Zealand.
Integrated catchment management—interweaving social process and science knowledge
Andrew Fenemor,Chris Phillips,Will Allen,Roger G. Young,Garth Harmsworth,Breck Bowden,Les Basher,P. A. Gillespie,Margaret Kilvington,Robert J. Davies-Colley,John R. Dymond,Anthony Cole,G Lauder,Tim Davie,Robert T. Smith,S Markham,Neil Deans,B Stuart,Maggie Atkinson,Anne G.E. Collins +19 more
TL;DR: The Motueka Integrated Catchment Management (ICMIM) project as mentioned in this paper was based on the idea that achieving ecosystem resilience at a catchment scale requires active measures to develop community resilience.
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Participatory modelling with an influence matrix and the calculation of whole-of-system sustainability values
TL;DR: An historical account of the theoretical development of the influence matrix and a stepwise account of how the method has been trialled in a New Zealand case study are provided, including an evaluation of its limitations and areas where future research is needed.
32
Interrogating participatory catchment organisations: cases from Canada, New Zealand, Scotland and the Scottish–English Borderlands
Brian R. Cook,Maggie Atkinson,H Chalmers,Luke Comins,Susan L. Cooksley,Neil Deans,Ioan Fazey,Andrew Fenemor,Mike Kesby,S Litke,D Marshall,Christopher Spray +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify three principles shared by participatory catchment organizations (i.e., trust brokers, collaborative decision making and win-wins) that show how, through participatory approaches founded on trust, complex problems can be resolved in ways that do not unduly punish groups or individuals.