A Critique of the In stream Flow Incremental Methodology

Abstract
A review and reanalysis of the published literature show that several assumptions are violated in the application of the Instream Flow Incremental Methodology (IFIM) without consideration of the implications of so doing. The fundamental assumption of a positive linear relationship between "potential available habitat" (WUA) and biomass of fish has neither been documented nor validated, particularly in warmwater streams. Absence of correlation precludes prediction of changes in fish populations. In some studies the test of this assumption appears to be equivalent to a calibration operation. The other assumption violated includes independent selection of habitat variables by fish. The presence of significant interaction among habitat variables can affect the stream flow recommendations. Another problem exists in application of Physical Habitat Simulation (PHABSIM): one WUA unit should not be interpreted as being equal to another in biological production or habitat value unless shown to be an exact replica. Several combinations of physical variables could give rise to the same amount of WUA, none of which may be correlated to the biomass of fish. The utilization, suitability, or preference curves should not be treated as probability functions; a rating of 1.0 is not equivalent to probability of 1.0. Care should be taken to distinguish between real behavioral preferences of fishes based on distributional occurrence from abundance (relative or absolute size) in a stream.