The Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft Laboratory, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR33 0HT, UK.
The Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft Laboratory, Lowestoft, Suffolk, NR33 0HT, UK.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Dec 15;645:1598-1616. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.243. Epub 2018 Jul 26.
Small, 1st and 2nd-order, headwater streams and ponds play essential roles in providing natural flood control, trapping sediments and contaminants, retaining nutrients, and maintaining biological diversity, which extend into downstream reaches, lakes and estuaries. However, the large geographic extent and high connectivity of these small water bodies with the surrounding terrestrial ecosystem makes them particularly vulnerable to growing land-use pressures and environmental change. The greatest pressure on the physical processes in these waters has been their extension and modification for agricultural and forestry drainage, resulting in highly modified discharge and temperature regimes that have implications for flood and drought control further downstream. The extensive length of the small stream network exposes rivers to a wide range of inputs, including nutrients, pesticides, heavy metals, sediment and emerging contaminants. Small water bodies have also been affected by invasions of non-native species, which along with the physical and chemical pressures, have affected most groups of organisms with consequent implications for the wider biodiversity within the catchment. Reducing the impacts and restoring the natural ecosystem function of these water bodies requires a three-tiered approach based on: restoration of channel hydromorphological dynamics; restoration and management of the riparian zone; and management of activities in the wider catchment that have both point-source and diffuse impacts. Such activities are expensive and so emphasis must be placed on integrated programmes that provide multiple benefits. Practical options need to be promoted through legislative regulation, financial incentives, markets for resource services and voluntary codes and actions.
小型的一级和二级溪流和池塘在提供自然洪水控制、拦截泥沙和污染物、保留养分以及维护生物多样性方面发挥着至关重要的作用,这些作用延伸到下游的河段、湖泊和河口。然而,这些小型水体与周围陆地生态系统的巨大地理范围和高度连通性,使它们特别容易受到不断增长的土地利用压力和环境变化的影响。这些水体的物理过程所面临的最大压力是它们被扩展和改造用于农业和林业排水,导致高度改变的流量和温度模式,这对下游的洪水和干旱控制产生影响。小型溪流网络的广泛长度使河流容易受到各种输入的影响,包括养分、农药、重金属、泥沙和新兴污染物。小型水体也受到非本地物种入侵的影响,这些物种以及物理和化学压力,对大多数生物群体都产生了影响,进而对集水区内更广泛的生物多样性产生了影响。减少这些水体的影响并恢复其自然生态系统功能需要采取三层方法,即:恢复渠道水力学形态动态;恢复和管理河岸带;以及管理更广泛集水区内具有点源和扩散影响的活动。这些活动成本高昂,因此必须重视提供多种效益的综合方案。需要通过立法监管、财政激励、资源服务市场以及自愿准则和行动来推广实用的选择。