The survey classifies
hydromorphological condition using WFD nomenclature: High, Good, Moderate,
Poor, Bad. Its typical use is to support the designation of high ecological
status sites. Other applications of the RHAT method include assessing
hydromorphological pressures, determining enhancement/restoration works
required and pre-/post- works conditions for specific projects. Research and
Operations teams based in Inland Fisheries Ireland have been using the RHAT
methodology to assess habitat condition across various sites and catchments of interest.The OPW Environmental River Enhancement Programme (EREP) uses the RHAT methodology to collect hydromorphology data on a catchment-wide basis using a Survey123 RHAT form. Further detailed information on these surveys is available in the annual reports, which can be found on the website.
For more information on the RHAT methodology
see the following references:
RHAT Training Manual (daera-ni.gov.uk) ISBN: 978-1-907053-65-8
River
Habitat Survey (Environment Agency 2003, Raven et al., 1998)
Field Name
Field Alias
Field Type
Field Description
catchmentWaterbody
Catchment/
Waterbody Name
String
Name of
watershed unit
river
River Name
String
Name of
river reach
rhatSpck
RHAT or Spot
Check
String
Full RHAT
survey or spot check survey (see RHAT manual)
surveyDirection
Survey
direction
String
Direction
walked from the survey starting point
dateSurvey
Survey Date
Date
Date of the
survey
sumAttributeScores
Sum of
attribute scores
Double
Sum of the
eight RHAT attributes (range is 0-32)
wfdClass
WFD class
String
WFD class
which corresponds to the sum (High, Good, Moderate, Poor, Bad)