4.7 Article

Lake and wetland ecosystem services measuring water storage and local climate regulation

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 53, Issue 4, Pages 3197-3223

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016WR019445

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Forestry Nonprofit Industry Scientific Research special project The Research of Ecosystem Services and Evaluation Techniques of Coastal Wetlands in China'' [201404305]
  2. Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship
  3. US National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [NSF DGE-1311230]
  4. Philanthropic Educational Organization scholar award
  5. open-fund grant from the State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology (SKLURE), Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences [SKLURE2012-2-3]

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Developing interdisciplinary methods to measure ecosystem services is a scientific priority, however, progress remains slow in part because we lack ecological production functions (EPFs) to quantitatively link ecohydrological processes to human benefits. In this study, we tested a new approach, combining a process-based model with regression models, to create EPFs to evaluate water storage and local climate regulation from a green infrastructure project on the Yongding River in Beijing, China. Seven artificial lakes and wetlands were established to improve local water storage and human comfort; evapotranspiration (ET) regulates both services. Managers want to minimize the trade-off between water losses and cooling to sustain water supplies while lowering the heat index (HI) to improve human comfort. We selected human benefit indicators using water storage targets and Beijing's HI, and the Variable Infiltration Capacity model to determine the change in ET from the new ecosystems. We created EPFs to quantify the ecosystem services as marginal values [Delta final ecosystem service/Delta ecohydrological process]: (1) Delta water loss (lake evaporation/volume)/Delta depth and (2) Delta summer HI/Delta ET. We estimate the new ecosystems increased local ET by 0.7 mm/d (20.3 W/m(2)) on the Yongding River. However, ET rates are causing water storage shortfalls while producing no improvements in human comfort. The shallow lakes/wetlands are vulnerable to drying when inflow rates fluctuate, low depths lead to higher evaporative losses, causing water storage shortfalls with minimal cooling effects. We recommend managers make the lakes deeper to increase water storage, and plant shade trees to improve human comfort in the parks.

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