The effects of drought on biodiversity in UK river ecosystems: Drying rivers in a wet country

WIREs Water Pub Date : 2024-07-10 DOI:10.1002/wat2.1745
Rachel Stubbington, Judy England, Romain Sarremejane, Glenn Watts, Paul J. Wood
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Abstract

Climate change is interacting with water resource pressures to alter the frequency, severity and spatial extent of drought, which can thus no longer be considered a purely natural hazard. Although particularly severe ecological impacts of drought have occurred in drylands, its effects on temperate ecosystems, including rivers, are also considerable. Extensive research spanning a diverse range of UK rivers offers an opportunity to place the effects of past drought in the context of intensifying climate change and to examine the likely effects of future drought in a typically cool, wet country. Here, drought manifests instream as deficits in surface water, modified flow velocities, and—increasingly—partial or complete drying of previously perennial and naturally non‐perennial reaches. As a result, drought causes declines in the taxonomic and functional biodiversity of freshwater communities including microorganisms, algae, plants, invertebrates and fish, altering ecological processes and associated benefits to people. Although freshwater communities have typically recovered quickly after previous UK droughts, an increase in drought extremity may compromise recovery following future events. The risk of droughts that push ecosystems beyond thresholds to persistent, species‐poor, functionally simplified states is increasing. Research and monitoring are needed to enable timely identification of rivers approaching such thresholds and thus to inform interventions that pull these ecosystems back from the brink. Management actions that support natural flow regimes and promote natural processes that diversify instream habitats, including drought refuges, are also crucial to support biodiversity within functional river ecosystems as they adapt to a changing world.This article is categorized under: Water and Life > Nature of Freshwater Ecosystems Water and Life > Stresses and Pressures on Ecosystems Water and Life > Conservation, Management, and Awareness
干旱对英国河流生态系统生物多样性的影响:潮湿国家的干涸河流
气候变化与水资源压力相互作用,改变了干旱的频率、严重程度和空间范围,因此干旱不再被视为纯粹的自然灾害。虽然干旱对旱地生态的影响尤为严重,但它对温带生态系统(包括河流)的影响也相当大。对英国各种河流的广泛研究为我们提供了一个机会,将过去干旱的影响置于日益加剧的气候变化背景下,并研究未来干旱可能对这个典型的凉爽、潮湿国家造成的影响。在这里,干旱表现为地表水不足、水流速度改变,以及以前多年生和天然非多年生河段的部分或完全干涸--这种情况越来越严重。因此,干旱会导致淡水群落(包括微生物、藻类、植物、无脊椎动物和鱼类)的生物分类和功能多样性下降,从而改变生态过程和人类的相关利益。尽管淡水群落在英国以往的干旱后通常都能迅速恢复,但干旱极端程度的增加可能会影响未来的恢复。干旱将生态系统推向持续、物种稀少、功能简化状态的阈值之外的风险正在增加。需要开展研究和监测,以便及时发现接近此类阈值的河流,从而为干预措施提供信息,将这些生态系统从边缘拉回来。在河流生态系统适应不断变化的世界的过程中,支持自然水流机制和促进河流栖息地多样化的自然过程(包括干旱庇护所)的管理措施对于支持功能性河流生态系统的生物多样性也至关重要:水与生命> 淡水生态系统的性质 水与生命> 生态系统的压力 水与生命> 保护、管理和认识
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