Wohl Ellen, Iskin Emily P
Department of Geosciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1482, USA.
Sci Adv. 2021 Dec 10;7(50):eabj0988. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.abj0988.
Rivers historically transported unquantified volumes of driftwood to the ocean. Driftwood alters coastal sediment dynamics and provides food and habitat for diverse organisms. Floating driftwood supports open-ocean organisms. Sunken wood sustains seafloor communities. Centuries of deforestation, flow regulation, and channel engineering have substantially reduced riverine large wood fluxes to the oceans. Here, we use contemporary records of wood flux to reservoirs and coastal regions to estimate the magnitude of potential contemporary global wood fluxes. We estimate that 4.7 million m of large wood could enter the oceans each year (the 95% prediction interval range is ~300,000 to 70 million m). This represents an upper bound for contemporary wood fluxes to the oceans because of wood removal from rivers and reservoirs and a lower bound for historical wood fluxes because of deforestation and river engineering. Substantial reduction of this wood flux likely negatively affects coastal and marine environments.
历史上,河流将数量无法量化的浮木输送至海洋。浮木改变了海岸沉积物动态,并为多种生物提供食物和栖息地。漂浮的浮木为远洋生物提供支持。沉没的木材维持着海底群落。几个世纪的森林砍伐、水流调节和河道工程已大幅减少了河流向海洋输送的大型木材流量。在此,我们利用木材流入水库和沿海地区的当代记录来估算当代全球木材潜在流量的规模。我们估计,每年可能有470万立方米的大型木材进入海洋(95%预测区间范围约为30万至7000万立方米)。由于河流和水库中的木材被移除,这代表了当代木材流入海洋的上限;而由于森林砍伐和河流工程,这又是历史木材流量的下限。这种木材流量的大幅减少可能会对沿海和海洋环境产生负面影响。