scholarly journals Ants as Bioindicators of Riparian Ecological Health in Catalonian Rivers

Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 625
Author(s):  
Vera Zina ◽  
Marc Ordeix ◽  
José Carlos Franco ◽  
Maria Teresa Ferreira ◽  
Maria Rosário Fernandes

In this study, we assess the potential of ants as bioindicators of riparian ecological health in two river types (upland and lowland type) located in the Catalonian region. We proposed to understand to what extent do metrics based on ant responses provide useful information that cannot be presented by traditional biophysical assessments while attempting an approach to creating an ant-based multimetric index (ant-based MMI) of the riparian ecological health. A total of 22 ant species were identified, and 42 metrics related to ant foraging activity, species richness, and functional traits were evaluated as potential core metrics of the index. Riparian features and proximal land use land cover (LULC) were used to distinguish disturbed from less disturbed sites. We found that ant communities strongly responded to human disturbance. When compared with an exclusively physical-based index for the assessment of the riparian health, the ant-based MMI was more sensitive to human disturbance, by also reacting to the effects of the surrounding LULC pressure. This study provides a preliminary approach for an ant-based assessment tool to evaluate the health of riparian corridors although additional research is required to include other river types and a wider stressor gradient before a wider application.

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1910 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Spruce ◽  
John Bolten ◽  
Raghavan Srinivasan ◽  
Venkat Lakshmi

This paper discusses research methodology to develop Land Use Land Cover (LULC) maps for the Lower Mekong Basin (LMB) for basin planning, using both MODIS and Landsat satellite data. The 2010 MODIS MOD09 and MYD09 8-day reflectance data was processed into monthly NDVI maps with the Time Series Product Tool software package and then used to classify regionally common forest and agricultural LULC types. Dry season circa 2010 Landsat top of atmosphere reflectance mosaics were classified to map locally common LULC types. Unsupervised ISODATA clustering was used to derive most LULC classifications. MODIS and Landsat classifications were combined with GIS methods to derive final 250-m LULC maps for Sub-basins (SBs) 1–8 of the LMB. The SB 7 LULC map with 14 classes was assessed for accuracy. This assessment compared random locations for sampled types on the SB 7 LULC map to geospatial reference data such as Landsat RGBs, MODIS NDVI phenologic profiles, high resolution satellite data, and Mekong River Commission data (e.g., crop calendars). The SB 7 LULC map showed an overall agreement to reference data of ~81%. By grouping three deciduous forest classes into one, the overall agreement improved to ~87%. The project enabled updated regional LULC maps that included more detailed agriculture LULC types. LULC maps were supplied to project partners to improve use of Soil and Water Assessment Tool for modeling hydrology and water use, plus enhance LMB water and disaster management in a region vulnerable to flooding, droughts, and anthropogenic change as part of basin planning and assessment.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Dunea ◽  
Petre Bretcan ◽  
Danut Tanislav ◽  
Gheorghe Serban ◽  
Razvan Teodorescu ◽  
...  

The paper reviews the state of water quality in Ialomita River Basin (IRB), Romania, between 2007 and 2018 using the land use/land cover and basin-specific conditions effects on sediments and nutrients load. On-site monitoring was performed in two control sections of the Ialomita River, one in the upper part of the basin (near Targoviste city) and the second near the discharge into the Danube (downstream of Tandarei town). The statistical averages of water parameters for 10 years’ monitoring in the control section that is close to the Ialomita River discharge in Danube were pH = 7.60 (range: 6.41–8.40), NH4-N = 1.20 mg/L (0.02–14.87), alkalinity = 4.12 mmol/L (1.34–6.27), NO3-N = 2.60 mg/L (0.08–17.30), PO4-P = 0.09 mg/L (0–0,31), dissolved oxygen (DO) = 8.87 mg/L (2.72–15.96), BOD5 = 5.50 mg/L (0.01–74.71), suspended solids (TSS) = 508.32 mg/L (15.2–4457), total dissolved salts (TDS) = 733.69 mg/L (455.2–1053), and river discharge = 38.60 m3/s (8.22–165). Expected mean concentration and soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) modeling have been employed in the GIS environment to extend the approach to large spatial patterns within the basin. The estimated average specific emission on the total area for nitrogen was 3.2 kg N/ha, and 0.3 kg P/ha for phosphorus highly influenced by the agricultural activities. The results are useful to raise awareness regarding water-quality degradation and the need to stop and even reverse such trends for local and national sustainable development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 13041
Author(s):  
Yuechao Chen ◽  
Makoto Nakatsugawa

The 2018 Hokkaido Eastern Iburi earthquake and its landslides threaten the safety and stability of the Atsuma River basin. This study investigates land use and land cover (LULC) change by analyzing the 2015 and 2020 LULC maps of the basin, and its impact on runoff and sediment transport in the basin by using the soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) model to accurately simulate the runoff and sediment transport process. This study finds that the earthquake and landslide transformed nearly 10% of the forest into bare land in the basin. The simulation results showed that the runoff, which was simulated based on the 2020 LULC data, was slightly higher than that based on the 2015 LULC data, and the sediment transport after the earthquake is significantly higher than before. The rate of sediment transportation after the earthquake, adjusted according to the runoff, was about 3.42 times more than before. This shows that as the forest land decreased, the bare land increased. Conversely, the runoff increased slightly, whereas the sediment transport rate increased significantly in the Atsuma River basin after the earthquake. In future, active governance activities performed by humans can reduce the amount of sediment transport in the basin.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 554-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janaki Ballav Swain ◽  
Kanhu Charan Patra

Abstract The variation in land use/land cover (LULC) and climate have a direct impact on the accuracy of any hydrological prediction. However, quantification of the effect of these two factors in an ungauged catchment setting is less discussed. Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) in combination with two regionalization techniques, i.e., Inverse Distance Weighted (IDW) and Kriging were applied on 32 catchments in India where each catchment was considered as ungauged at least once. The combined and isolated impacts of LULC change (LULCC) and climate variability on streamflow for the period of 1990–2011 were quantified at an annual scale through four different cases. Satisfactory results were obtained from SWAT for the analysis of both the gauged and ungauged set-up. The overall outcomes suggest that, due to the influence of the combined effects of LULCC and climate variability, there was a decrease in the annual streamflow volume by more than 21% from the first period (1990–2000) to the second period (2001–2011) in the selected catchment treated as ungauged. The variable climate factor overshadowed the effect of LULCC. The result may be correlated with the increase in temperature and the decrease in rainfall volume, which is distinctive in a monsoon-dominated country like India.


PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e2773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Angulo ◽  
Raphaël Boulay ◽  
Francisca Ruano ◽  
Alberto Tinaut ◽  
Xim Cerdá

In countries with high levels of urbanization, protected areas are often subject to human disturbance. In addition to dealing with fragmentation, land managers also have to confront the loss of characteristic ecosystems due to biotic homogenization, which is the increasing similarity of species assemblages among geographically separate regions. Using ants as a model system, we explored whether anthropogenic factors negatively affect biodiversity of protected areas of a regional network. We first analysed the effect of fragmentation and human activity on ant biodiversity within protected areas. Secondly, we tested whether homogenization could occur among protected areas. We sampled 79 plots in the most common habitats of 32 protected areas in southern Spain and calculated ant community richness and diversity indices, endemic richness, and Bray–Curtis similarity indices (between pairs of plots). We related these indices with patch fragmentation and human disturbance variables, taking into account environmental, spatial and landscape covariates. We used ANOSIM to test for differences between similarity indices, specifically among levels of anthropogenic disturbance. Species richness was positively correlated with the distance from the border of the protected areas and the number of endemic species was negatively correlated with the degree of fragmentation. Ant communities were similar within each protected area but differed across regions. Human disturbance was not correlated with community similarity among sampling points. Our approach suggests how the ability of European protected areas to sustain biodiversity is limited because they remain susceptible to anthropogenic impacts. Although ant communities maintained their biological distinctiveness, we reveal how fragmentation within protected areas is important for community richness and endemism maintenance.


Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 674
Author(s):  
André Fonseca ◽  
Jean-Philippe Ugille ◽  
Adrien Michez ◽  
Patricia María Rodríguez-González ◽  
Gonçalo Duarte ◽  
...  

The connectivity of riparian forests can be used as a proxy for the capacity of riparian zones to provide ecological functions, goods and services. In this study, we aim to test the potential of the freely available Copernicus “Riparian Zones” dataset to characterize the connectivity of riparian forests located in two European bioclimatic regions—the Mediterranean and the Central Baltic hydroregions—when subject to a gradient of human disturbance characterized by land-use/land-cover and hydromorphological pressures. We extracted riparian patches using the Copernicus “Actual Riparian Zone” (ARZ) layer and calculated connectivity using the Integral Index of Connectivity (IIC). We then compared the results with a “Manual Riparian Zone” (MRZ) layer, produced by manually digitizing riparian vegetation patches over a very high-resolution World Imagery layer. Our research evidenced reduced forest connectivity in both hydroregions, with the exception of Least Disturbed sites in the Central Baltic hydroregion. The ARZ layer exhibited overall suitability to assess the connectivity of riparian forests in the Central Baltic hydroregion, while the Mediterranean hydroregion displayed a consistent pattern of connectivity overestimation in all levels of human disturbance. To address this, we recommend some improvements in the spatial resolution and thematic accuracy of the Copernicus ARZ layer.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Rafael Forti Barbieri

<p>Several biotic and abiotic stressors can influence community assembly. The negative co-occurrence patterns observed within many communities, for example, may derive either from behavioural similarities (e.g. species displaying high aggression levels towards each other) or habitat preference. I evaluated the role of several stressors that may shape New Zealand’s ant communities. First, I investigated (in chapter 2) the co-occurrence patterns of two native ant communities located within transitional grassland-forest habitats. I also monitored the temperature variation in these habitats over a one-year period. I found that grasslands are exposed to higher temperature variation than forest habitats. I also found that some ants are mostly associated with forest habitats and others with grasslands. Using null models to examine these communities, I found evidence that two ant species (Monomorium antarcticum and Prolasius advenus) exhibit negative co-occurrence patterns. In the reminder of my thesis I developed a series of laboratory-based experiments to examine the processes that could explain the co-occurrence patterns that I observed in these ant communities.  In chapter 3, I subjected heterospecific groups of ants to interactions in controlled conditions. I asked if interspecific aggression predict the survival probability and co-occurrence patterns described in chapter 2. My results demonstrated that aggression predicted the survival probability of interacting ant species and their co-occurrence patterns. I argued that aggressive behaviour might reflect the risks imposed by competitors. Differences in aggression may thus be a key factor influencing sympatric and allopatric co-occurrence patterns of these ant communities.  In chapter 4, I tested the hypotheses that arrival sequence and diet influence the strength of interactions between colonies of two species that exhibited negative co-occurrence patterns (P. advenus and M. antarcticum). When arriving first, P. advenus displayed increased aggression and M. antarcticum a defensive reaction. The adoption of a defensive reaction by M. antarcticum increased their colony survival probability. Changes in carbohydrate and protein availability modulated colony activity rates of both species. These results indicate that arrival sequence can modulate the territorial behaviour displayed by interacting species in situations of conflict. Also, I showed that these ant species adjust their foraging activity rates in according to their diet, but different species do so differently.  In chapter 5, I expanded the scope of chapter 4 and asked if aggression and foraging behaviour of P. advenus and M. antarcticum change in different conditions of temperature, diet and group size. For both ant species, changes in temperature had stronger effects on small than large colonies. Small groups of M. antarcticum displayed higher foraging activity at lower temperatures. Conversely, small groups of P. advenus displayed higher foraging activity at high temperatures. Also, small M. antarcticum colonies displayed increased aggression and significantly reduced the size of large P. advenus colonies, regardless of temperature and diet. These results suggest that P. advenus and M. antarcticum perform differently at different temperatures. Furthermore, I demonstrated that the persistence of these small colonies might be related to their ability to modulate foraging activities and interspecific aggression according to the environment.  I also investigated (in chapter 6) the effects of a neurotoxic pesticide (neonicotinoid) on a native (M. antarcticum) and an invasive ant (Linepithema humile). I tested whether sublethal contamination with a neonicotinoid affects foraging, fitness and the outcome of interspecific interactions between these ants. Overall, pesticide exposure increased aggression of the invasive ant and reduced the aggression of the native species. Importantly, non-exposed individuals of the invasive species subjected to interactions against exposed natives were less aggressive, but more likely to survive. These results suggest that the modification of the physicochemical environment by pesticide contamination could change the dynamics of communities and influence invasion success.  Overall, this thesis highlights that synergistic effects between several biotic and abiotic factors influence community assembly. My results suggest that non-random allopatric patterns of niche occupancy observed in these ant communities are better explained by high levels of aggression displayed between pairs of species that seldom co-occur, though I was unable to falsify the hypothesis that habitat preference also plays a role in determining their distribution and co-occurrence patterns. The modification of behaviour by external factors – either natural (e.g. temperature) or human mediated (e.g. pesticide exposure) – likely has broad effects on population and community dynamics and on patterns of species co-existence.</p>


Oryx ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorraine Scotson ◽  
Steven Ross ◽  
Todd W. Arnold

Abstract Asiatic black bear Ursus thibetanus and sun bear Helarctos malayanus populations are declining throughout South-east Asia as a result of habitat loss and human disturbance. Knowledge of the distribution and status of each species is limited and largely anecdotal. Range maps are coarse, compiled by expert opinion, and presence or absence is unknown over large portions of South-east Asia. These two species co-occur in Lao People's Democratic Republic and may be faring better there than in neighbouring countries. During 2010–2013 we searched for bear sign along 99 transects within eight study sites throughout Lao. To explore countrywide relative abundance and habitat suitability, we modelled bear sign as a log-linear function of biological and anthropogenic predictors that were associated with habitat assemblages and human disturbance. Bears favored higher elevations and rugged terrain in areas less accessible to humans, and were most abundant in the north and east of Lao. Suitable habitats were rare in the southern lowland plains where bear abundance was relatively low. Our model predicted that Nam Et–Phou Louey National Protected Area had the largest areas of suitable bear habitat, followed by the Nakai-Nam Teun and Nam Ha National Protected Areas. Using transects to survey for bear sign, we created a replicable geographical information system based assessment tool for bears in Lao that can be used to identify conservation opportunities and monitor changes in bear distribution over time.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document