Department of Science and Planning, The Nature Conservancy, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Feb 28;6(2):e17407. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017407.
Estuaries are ecologically and economically valuable and have been highly degraded from both land and sea. Estuarine habitats in the coastal zone are under pressure from a range of human activities. In the United States and elsewhere, very few conservation plans focused on estuaries are regional in scope; fewer still address threats to estuary long term viability.We have compiled basic information about the spatial extent of threats to identify commonalities. To do this we classify estuaries into hierarchical networks that share similar threat characteristics using a spatial database (geodatabase) of threats to estuaries from land and sea in the western U.S. Our results show that very few estuaries in this region (16%) have no or minimal stresses from anthropogenic activity. Additionally, one quarter (25%) of all estuaries in this study have moderate levels of all threats. The small number of un-threatened estuaries is likely not representative of the ecological variability in the region and will require working to abate threats at others. We think the identification of these estuary groups can foster sharing best practices and coordination of conservation activities amongst estuaries in any geography.
河口具有生态和经济价值,但已受到陆海双重退化的严重影响。沿海地带的河口生境正承受着各种人类活动的压力。在美国和其他地方,很少有以河口为重点的保护计划具有区域范围;更少的计划涉及到对河口长期生存能力的威胁。我们已经收集了有关威胁空间范围的基本信息,以确定共同特征。为此,我们使用美国西部陆海对河口威胁的空间数据库(地理数据库),将具有相似威胁特征的河口分类为层次网络。我们的结果表明,该地区很少有(16%)河口不受或几乎不受人为活动的影响。此外,本研究中四分之一(25%)的所有河口都受到各种威胁的中度影响。受威胁的河口数量很少可能不能代表该地区的生态变异性,需要努力减轻其他河口的威胁。我们认为,这些河口群体的识别可以促进在任何地理区域的河口之间分享最佳实践和协调保护活动。