4.7 Article

Potential of water quality wetlands to mitigate habitat losses from agricultural drainage modernization

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 838, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156358

关键词

Agricultural intensification; Amphibians; Pollinators; Grassland birds; Corn belt

资金

  1. Oak Ridge Institute for Science Education [DW089925247]

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Based on spatially explicit models of 37 catchments in important agricultural and biodiversity regions, this study finds that drainage modification alone can lead to moderate direct losses and overall declines in suitable amphibian habitat. However, the inclusion of water quality wetlands may mitigate these losses while also increasing grassland bird and pollinator habitat.
Given widespread biodiversity declines, a growing global human population, and demands to improve water quality, there is an immediate need to explore land management solutions that support multiple ecosystem services. Agricultural water quality wetlands designed to provide both water quality benefits and wetland and grassland habitat are an emerging restoration solution that may reverse habitat declines in intensive agricultural areas. Installation of water quality wetlands in the Upper Midwest, USA, when considered alongside the repair and modification of aging agricultural tile drainage infrastructure, is a likely scenario that may mitigate nutrient pollution exported from agricultural systems and improve crop yields. The capacity of water quality wetlands to provide habitat within the wetland pool and the surrounding grassland is not well-studied, particularly with respect to potential habitat changes resulting from drainage infrastructure upgrades. For the current study, we produced spatially explicit models of 37 catchments distributed throughout an important region for agriculture and biodiversity, the Des Moines Lobe of Iowa. Four scenarios were considered - with and without improved drainage and with and without water quality wetlands - to estimate the net potential habitat implications of these scenarios for amphibians, grassland birds, and wild bees. Model results indicate that drainage modification alone will likely result in moderate direct losses of suitable amphibian habitat and large declines in overall habitat quality. However, inclusion of water quality wetlands at the catchment scale may mitigate these amphibian habitat losses while also increasing grassland bird and pollinator habitat. The impacts of water quality wetlands and drainage modernization on waterfowl in the region require additional study.

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