Kitzes Justin, Shirley Rebekah
Energy and Resources Group, University of California, Berkeley, 310 Barrows Hall, Berkeley, CA, 94720-3050, USA.
Ambio. 2016 Feb;45(1):110-9. doi: 10.1007/s13280-015-0683-3. Epub 2015 Jul 14.
In many regions of the world, biodiversity surveys are not routinely conducted prior to activities that lead to land conversion, such as development projects. Here we use top-down methods based on global range maps and bottom-up methods based on macroecological scaling laws to illuminate the otherwise hidden biodiversity impacts of three large hydroelectric dams in the state of Sarawak in northern Borneo. Our retrospective impact assessment finds that the three reservoirs inundate habitat for 331 species of birds (3 million individuals) and 164 species of mammals (110 million individuals). A minimum of 2100 species of trees (900 million individuals) and 17 700 species of arthropods (34 billion individuals) are estimated to be affected by the dams. No extinctions of bird, mammal, or tree species are expected due to habitat loss following reservoir inundation, while 4-7 arthropod species extinctions are predicted. These assessment methods are applicable to any data-limited system undergoing land-use change.
在世界许多地区,在诸如开发项目等导致土地用途转变的活动之前,并未定期开展生物多样性调查。在此,我们运用基于全球分布地图的自上而下方法以及基于宏观生态尺度定律的自下而上方法,以揭示位于婆罗洲北部沙捞越州的三座大型水电站大坝在其他方面隐藏的生物多样性影响。我们的回顾性影响评估发现,这三座水库淹没了331种鸟类(300万只个体)和164种哺乳动物(1.1亿只个体)的栖息地。据估计,至少2100种树木(9亿株个体)和17700种节肢动物(340亿只个体)受到大坝影响。预计不会因水库淹没导致的栖息地丧失而使鸟类、哺乳动物或树木物种灭绝,而预计会有4至7种节肢动物物种灭绝。这些评估方法适用于任何正在经历土地利用变化且数据有限的系统。