School of Natural Resources, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506-6125, USA.
School of Natural Resources, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506-6125, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Jul 1;628-629:338-349. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.02.062. Epub 2018 Feb 13.
We conducted a large-scale assessment of unconventional oil and gas (UOG) development effects on brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) distribution. We compiled 2231 brook trout collection records from the Upper Susquehanna River Watershed, USA. We used boosted regression tree (BRT) analysis to predict occurrence probability at the 1:24,000 stream-segment scale as a function of natural and anthropogenic landscape and climatic attributes. We then evaluated the importance of landscape context (i.e., pre-existing natural habitat quality and anthropogenic degradation) in modulating the effects of UOG on brook trout distribution under UOG development scenarios. BRT made use of 5 anthropogenic (28% relative influence) and 7 natural (72% relative influence) variables to model occurrence with a high degree of accuracy [Area Under the Receiver Operating Curve (AUC)=0.85 and cross-validated AUC=0.81]. UOG development impacted 11% (n=2784) of streams and resulted in a loss of predicted occurrence in 126 (4%). Most streams impacted by UOG had unsuitable underlying natural habitat quality (n=1220; 44%). Brook trout were predicted to be absent from an additional 26% (n=733) of streams due to pre-existing non-UOG land uses (i.e., agriculture, residential and commercial development, or historic mining). Streams with a predicted and observed (via existing pre- and post-disturbance fish sampling records) loss of occurrence due to UOG tended to have intermediate natural habitat quality and/or intermediate levels of non-UOG stress. Simulated development of permitted but undeveloped UOG wells (n=943) resulted in a loss of predicted occurrence in 27 additional streams. Loss of occurrence was strongly dependent upon landscape context, suggesting effects of current and future UOG development are likely most relevant in streams near the probability threshold due to pre-existing habitat degradation.
我们对非常规油气(UOG)开发对溪红点鲑(Salvelinus fontinalis)分布的影响进行了大规模评估。我们从美国上萨斯奎哈纳河流域汇编了 2231 条溪红点鲑的采集记录。我们使用增强回归树(BRT)分析来预测 1:24000 溪流段尺度的出现概率,作为自然和人为景观以及气候属性的函数。然后,我们评估了景观背景(即现有自然栖息地质量和人为退化)在调节 UOG 对溪红点鲑分布的影响方面的重要性,在 UOG 开发情景下。BRT 利用 5 个人为因素(28%的相对影响)和 7 个自然因素(72%的相对影响)来对出现进行高精度建模[接收者操作特征曲线下的面积(AUC)=0.85 和交叉验证 AUC=0.81]。UOG 开发影响了 11%(n=2784)的溪流,导致 126 条溪流(4%)的预测出现减少。受 UOG 影响的大多数溪流都有不合适的潜在自然栖息地质量(n=1220;44%)。由于现有的非 UOG 土地利用(即农业、住宅和商业开发或历史采矿),预计还有另外 26%(n=733)的溪流将没有溪红点鲑。由于 UOG 而出现和观察到(通过现有的干扰前后鱼类采样记录)的溪流预测出现减少,其倾向于具有中等自然栖息地质量和/或中等程度的非 UOG 压力。模拟开发已许可但未开发的 UOG 井(n=943)导致另外 27 条溪流的预测出现减少。出现减少的情况强烈依赖于景观背景,这表明当前和未来的 UOG 开发的影响可能在由于现有栖息地退化而处于概率阈值附近的溪流中最为相关。