scholarly journals Quantifying the response of a functional indicator of ecosystem health to disturbance gradients in New Zealand riverine environments: a meta-analysis

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Gault

<p><b>In New Zealand, recent policy changes require freshwater managers to take more comprehensive and integrated approaches to monitoring and maintaining ecosystem health. To attempt to prevent and reverse the adverse effects of land use change on freshwater ecosystems, management decisions need to be based upon a suite of indicators each with a strong foundation of knowledge regarding the nature of responses at a national scale. Monitoring ecosystem function in addition to structural indicators has long been suggested to provide a more accurate and holistic narrative of ecosystem health, however, it has yet to be adopted in routine bioassessment. The cotton strip assay has shown promise as a consistent, relatively cheap, and repeatable method for monitoring freshwater ecosystem function, indicating the ecological processing rates of riverine microbial communities and the organic matter processing potential of riverine environments. Numerous regional-scale studies have applied the cotton strip assay in New Zealand, but these data have yet to be explored in unison. For managers to successfully monitor, manage, and restore ecological processes in river environments, a comprehensive understanding of the proximate drivers of cotton breakdown is needed. The aim of this study is to conduct a meta-analysis of cotton strip assay data to explore the relationship between river function and other measures of ecosystem health and land-use stressors at a national scale.</b></p> <p>I collated published and unpublished cotton strip data to create a meta-dataset, with measures harmonised by deployment time and temperature for more meaningful comparisons at a national scale. I sourced additional data from national databases describing water quality and physical river classification information for more comprehensive, higher resolution analyses. I then used the meta-dataset was to investigate the nature of cotton decomposition responses along varying levels of impairment across different seasonal conditions and spatial catchment attributes. </p> <p>I used linear mixed-effects models to determine the relationships between cotton decomposition and physicochemical predictor variables, along with any additional influence attributed to underlying spatial variation across sites. Results suggest that bioavailable nutrients and water clarity are the largest drivers in cotton breakdown rates at a national scale. Water temperature and seasonal conditions emerged as likely limiting factors on microbial activity and cotton breakdown, indicating that consistent intra-seasonal monitoring is advisable. Climate and underlying geology can also be important when looking to discriminate underlying catchment variation and should be incorporated when making larger scale comparisons. Relationships with land use were found to be non-linear and likely to have too many co-varying factors enacting influence on cotton breakdown rates to be successful predictive gradients. Breakdown responses were, however, most consistent under high levels of vegetation cover, and high variability in responses in more urban and pastoral developed catchments. The assays’ sensitivity to nutrient enrichment at a national scale could aid in informing management policies with respect to nutrient limits, and the setting of natural ecosystem processing benchmarks.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Gault

<p><b>In New Zealand, recent policy changes require freshwater managers to take more comprehensive and integrated approaches to monitoring and maintaining ecosystem health. To attempt to prevent and reverse the adverse effects of land use change on freshwater ecosystems, management decisions need to be based upon a suite of indicators each with a strong foundation of knowledge regarding the nature of responses at a national scale. Monitoring ecosystem function in addition to structural indicators has long been suggested to provide a more accurate and holistic narrative of ecosystem health, however, it has yet to be adopted in routine bioassessment. The cotton strip assay has shown promise as a consistent, relatively cheap, and repeatable method for monitoring freshwater ecosystem function, indicating the ecological processing rates of riverine microbial communities and the organic matter processing potential of riverine environments. Numerous regional-scale studies have applied the cotton strip assay in New Zealand, but these data have yet to be explored in unison. For managers to successfully monitor, manage, and restore ecological processes in river environments, a comprehensive understanding of the proximate drivers of cotton breakdown is needed. The aim of this study is to conduct a meta-analysis of cotton strip assay data to explore the relationship between river function and other measures of ecosystem health and land-use stressors at a national scale.</b></p> <p>I collated published and unpublished cotton strip data to create a meta-dataset, with measures harmonised by deployment time and temperature for more meaningful comparisons at a national scale. I sourced additional data from national databases describing water quality and physical river classification information for more comprehensive, higher resolution analyses. I then used the meta-dataset was to investigate the nature of cotton decomposition responses along varying levels of impairment across different seasonal conditions and spatial catchment attributes. </p> <p>I used linear mixed-effects models to determine the relationships between cotton decomposition and physicochemical predictor variables, along with any additional influence attributed to underlying spatial variation across sites. Results suggest that bioavailable nutrients and water clarity are the largest drivers in cotton breakdown rates at a national scale. Water temperature and seasonal conditions emerged as likely limiting factors on microbial activity and cotton breakdown, indicating that consistent intra-seasonal monitoring is advisable. Climate and underlying geology can also be important when looking to discriminate underlying catchment variation and should be incorporated when making larger scale comparisons. Relationships with land use were found to be non-linear and likely to have too many co-varying factors enacting influence on cotton breakdown rates to be successful predictive gradients. Breakdown responses were, however, most consistent under high levels of vegetation cover, and high variability in responses in more urban and pastoral developed catchments. The assays’ sensitivity to nutrient enrichment at a national scale could aid in informing management policies with respect to nutrient limits, and the setting of natural ecosystem processing benchmarks.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 551-591 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott T. Larned ◽  
Jonathan Moores ◽  
Jenni Gadd ◽  
Brenda Baillie ◽  
Marc Schallenberg

Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharina Doehring ◽  
Joanne E. Clapcott ◽  
Roger G. Young

In New Zealand, streamside fencing is a well-recognised restoration technique for pastoral waterways. However, the response of stream ecosystem function to fencing is not well quantified. We measured the response to fencing of eight variables describing ecosystem function and 11 variables describing physical habitat and water quality at 11 paired stream sites (fenced and unfenced) over a 30-year timespan. We hypothesised that (1) fencing would improve the state of stream ecosystem health as described by physical, water quality and functional indicators due to riparian re-establishment and (2) time since fencing would increase the degree of change from impacted to less-impacted as described by physical, water quality and functional indicators. We observed high site-to-site variability in both physical and functional metrics. Stream shade was the only measure that showed a significant difference between treatments with higher levels of shade at fenced than unfenced sites. Cotton tensile-strength loss was the only functional measurement that indicated a response to fencing and increased over time since treatment within fenced sites. Our results suggest that stream restoration by fencing follows a complex pathway, over a space-for-time continuum, illustrating the overarching catchment influence at a reach scale. Small-scale (less than 2% of the upstream catchment area) efforts to fence the riparian zones of streams appear to have little effect on ecosystem function. We suggest that repeated measures of structural and functional indicators of ecosystem health are needed to inform robust assessments of stream restoration.


Ecosystems ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 1424-1443 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. McDaniel ◽  
D. Saha ◽  
M. G. Dumont ◽  
M. Hernández ◽  
M. A. Adams

Earth ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 440-456
Author(s):  
Roger A. Pielke ◽  
Jimmy Adegoke ◽  
Faisal Hossain ◽  
Dev Niyogi

Risks from human intervention in the climate system are raising concerns with respect to individual species and ecosystem health and resiliency. A dominant approach uses global climate models to predict changes in climate in the coming decades and then to downscale this information to assess impacts to plant communities, animal habitats, agricultural and urban ecosystems, and other parts of the Earth’s life system. To achieve robust assessments of the threats to these systems in this top-down, outcome vulnerability approach, however, requires skillful prediction, and representation of changes in regional and local climate processes, which has not yet been satisfactorily achieved. Moreover, threats to biodiversity and ecosystem function, such as from invasive species, are in general, not adequately included in the assessments. We discuss a complementary assessment framework that builds on a bottom-up vulnerability concept that requires the determination of the major human and natural forcings on the environment including extreme events, and the interactions between these forcings. After these forcings and interactions are identified, then the relative risks of each issue can be compared with other risks or forcings in order to adopt optimal mitigation/adaptation strategies. This framework is a more inclusive way of assessing risks, including climate variability and longer-term natural and anthropogenic-driven change, than the outcome vulnerability approach which is mainly based on multi-decadal global and regional climate model predictions. We therefore conclude that the top-down approach alone is outmoded as it is inadequate for robustly assessing risks to biodiversity and ecosystem function. In contrast the bottom-up, integrative approach is feasible and much more in line with the needs of the assessment and conservation community. A key message of our paper is to emphasize the need to consider coupled feedbacks since the Earth is a dynamically interactive system. This should be done not just in the model structure, but also in its application and subsequent analyses. We recognize that the community is moving toward that goal and we urge an accelerated pace.


Author(s):  
A. J. Braakhuis ◽  
V. X. Somerville ◽  
R. D. Hurst

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.


2021 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 003685042110261
Author(s):  
Hamza Islam ◽  
Habibuulah Abbasi ◽  
Ahmed Karam ◽  
Ali Hassan Chughtai ◽  
Mansoor Ahmed Jiskani

In this study, the Land Use/Land Cover (LULC) change has been observed in wetlands comprises of Manchar Lake, Keenjhar Lake, and Chotiari Reservoir in Pakistan over the last four decades from 1972 to 2020. Each wetland has been categorized into four LULC classes; water, natural vegetation, agriculture land, and dry land. Multitemporal Landsat satellite data including; Multi-Spectral Scanner (MSS), Thematic Mapper (TM), and Operational Land Imager (OLI) images were used for LULC changes evaluation. The Supervised Maximum-likelihood classifier method is used to acquire satellite imagery for detecting the LULC changes during the whole study period. Soil adjusted vegetation index technique (SAVI) was also used to reduce the effects of soil brightness values for estimating the actual vegetation cover of each study site. Results have shown the significant impact of human activities on freshwater resources by changing the natural ecosystem of wetlands. Change detection analysis showed that the impacts on the land cover affect the landscape of the study area by about 40% from 1972 to 2020. The vegetation cover of Manchar Lake and Keenjhar Lake has been decreased by 6,337.17 and 558.18 ha, respectively. SAVI analysis showed that soil profile is continuously degrading which vigorously affects vegetation cover within the study area. The overall classification accuracy and Kappa statistics showed an accuracy of >90% for all LULC mapping studies. This work demonstrates the LULC changes as a critical monitoring basis for ongoing analyses of changes in land management to enable decision-makers to establish strategies for effectively using land resources.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-172
Author(s):  
David C. Geddis ◽  
Ian C. Appleton

The method of operation of a pilot car seat rental scheme is described. It is unique in that there are sufficient seats to accommodate every newborn infant in the city. Both infant and child seats are available. The pattern of use since the establishment of the scheme in December 1981 is reported. Currently 60% to 70% of parents rent infant seats and 35% to 40% rent child seats. Yearly roadside observations have shown a steady increase in the number of restrained children. In 1981 no infants traveled in approved restraints. In 1984 66% did so. The 1984 results for other age groups were: 6 to 18 months of age, 88%; 18 months to 2½ years of age, 82%; 2½ to 3½ years of age, 66%; 3½ to 4½ years of age, 62%. At this time no legislation applied to children less than 8 years of age. The success of this pilot scheme suggests it should be expanded on a national scale.


2018 ◽  
Vol 626 ◽  
pp. 1394-1401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Di Sun ◽  
Hong Yang ◽  
Dexin Guan ◽  
Ming Yang ◽  
Jiabing Wu ◽  
...  

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