4.7 Article

Physical habitat in conterminous US streams and Rivers, part 2: A quantitative assessment of habitat condition

期刊

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
卷 141, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.109047

关键词

Stream habitat complexity; Streambed stability; Instream fine sediments; Riparian disturbance; Riparian vegetation; Relative risk; Ecological assessment; Hydro -morphology

资金

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [HHSN316201200013W]
  2. General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT) corporation

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Rigorous assessments of water resources' ecological condition and the impact of human activities on them require quantitative data, showing that artificial disturbances have negative effects on physical habitats. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's study found that a certain proportion of rivers and lakes in the country are in poor condition, characterized by anthropogenic disturbances, sediment accumulation, inadequate riparian vegetation cover, and low habitat complexity. The severity of these conditions varies in different ecological regions.
Rigorous assessments of the ecological condition of water resources and the effect of human activities on those waters require quantitative physical, chemical, and biological data. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's river and stream surveys quantify river and stream bed particle size and stability, instream habitat complexity and cover, riparian vegetation cover and structure, and anthropogenic disturbance activities. Physical habitat is strongly controlled by natural geoclimatic factors that co-vary with human activities. We expressed the anthropogenic alteration of physical habitat as O/E ratios of observed habitat metric values divided by values expected under least-disturbed reference conditions, where site-specific expected values vary given their geo-climatic and geomorphic context. We set criteria for good, fair, and poor condition based on the distribution of O/E values in regional least-disturbed reference sites. Poor conditions existed in 22-24% of the 1.2 million km of streams and rivers in the conterminous U.S. for riparian human disturbance, streambed sediment and riparian vegetation cover, versus 14% for instream habitat complexity. Based on the same four indicators, the percentage of stream length in poor condition within 9 separate U.S. ecoregions ranged from 4% to 42%. Associations of our physical habitat indices with anthropogenic pressures demonstrate the scope of anthropogenic habitat alteration; habitat condition was negatively related to the level of anthropogenic disturbance nationally and in nearly all ecoregions. Relative risk estimates showed that streams and rivers with poor sediment, riparian cover complexity, or instream habitat cover conditions were 1.4 to 2.6 times as likely to also have fish or macro -invertebrate assemblages in poor condition. Our physical habitat condition indicators help explain deviations in biological conditions from those observed among least-disturbed sites and inform management actions for rehabilitating impaired waters and mitigating further ecological degradation.

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