4.7 Article

Riparian buffer length is more influential than width on river water quality: A case study in southern Costa Rica

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 286, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.112132

Keywords

Riparian buffer; Water quality; Watershed management; River conservation; Land use planning; Neotropics

Funding

  1. Bobolink Foundation
  2. Troper Wojcicki Foundation
  3. International Conservation Fund of Canada
  4. Moore Family Foundation
  5. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
  6. KEEN Effect

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The study highlights the importance of riparian forest buffer length over width in conserving water quality in riparian zones. A lengthier buffer has a greater impact on water quality compared to wider buffers. It suggests that a 15-meter-wide riparian forest buffer supported by Costa Rican legislation can improve water quality if it is at least 500 meters long, providing a rapid and cost-effective management approach to balance agricultural production and water quality protection.
Riparian zones are one of the most productive ecosystems in the world, but are at risk due to agricultural expansion and climate change. To maximize return on conservation investment in mixed-use landscapes, it is important to identify the minimum intact riparian forest buffer sizes to conserve riparian ecosystem services. The minimum riparian forest buffer width necessary to maintain tropical river water quality remains unclear, and there is little analysis of effective riparian buffer lengths. Also, in studies on the effect of land use on river water quality globally, there is little standardization in the area where land use is analyzed. Here, these challenges were addressed in the Osa Peninsula in southwestern Costa Rica. Water quality parameters and social variables were sampled at 194 locations across the region. For each sample, land use was calculated in nine different riparian buffer sizes and at the sampling location. Riparian forest cover had a positive effect on water quality parameters, while agricultural cover had a negative effect. The longer the length of the buffer considered, the greater the relative support for influencing water quality (1000 m > 500 m > 100 m). All buffer widths yielded similar support within each length class. These results indicate that length of riparian forest buffers, not width, drives their ability to conserve water quality. While wide and long riparian forests are ideal to maximize the protection of river water quality and other ecosystem services, in landscapes where that is impractical, the 15-m-wide riparian forest buffers that are supported by Costa Rican legislation could improve water quality, providing that they are at least 500 m long. The results also indicate the importance of methodological standardization in studies that monitor land use effects on water quality. The authors propose that studies in similar regions analyze land use in riparian zones 15-m-wide by 1000 m upstream. Conserving and restoring narrow, long riparian forest buffers could provide a rapid, economical management approach to balance agricultural production and water quality protection.

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