U.S. Geological Survey, Western Geographic Science Center, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.
Ohio State University, CFAES Rattan Lal Center for Carbon Management and Sequestration, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2022 Nov 25;849:157738. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157738. Epub 2022 Aug 4.
In this article we describe the natural hydrogeomorphological and biogeochemical cycles of dryland fluvial ecosystems that make them unique, yet vulnerable to land use activities and climate change. We introduce Natural Infrastructure in Dryland Streams (NIDS), which are structures naturally or anthropogenically created from earth, wood, debris, or rock that can restore implicit function of these systems. This manuscript further discusses the capability of and functional similarities between beaver dams and anthropogenic NIDS, documented by decades of scientific study. In addition, we present the novel, evidence-based finding that NIDS can create wetlands in water-scarce riparian zones, with soil organic carbon stock as much as 200 to 1400 Mg C/ha in the top meter of soil. We identify the key restorative action of NIDS, which is to slow the drainage of water from the landscape such that more of it can infiltrate and be used to facilitate natural physical, chemical, and biological processes in fluvial environments. Specifically, we assert that the rapid drainage of water from such environments can be reversed through the restoration of natural infrastructure that once existed. We then explore how NIDS can be used to restore the natural biogeochemical feedback loops in these systems. We provide examples of how NIDS have been used to restore such feedback loops, the lessons learned from installation of NIDS in the dryland streams of the southwestern United States, how such efforts might be scaled up, and what the implications are for mitigating climate change effects. Our synthesis portrays how restoration using NIDS can support adaptation to and protection from climate-related disturbances and stressors such as drought, water shortages, flooding, heatwaves, dust storms, wildfire, biodiversity losses, and food insecurity.
本文描述了旱地河流生态系统的自然水文地貌和生物地球化学循环,这些循环使它们具有独特性,但也容易受到土地利用活动和气候变化的影响。我们引入了旱地溪流中的自然基础设施(NIDS),这是一种自然或人为创造的结构,由土、木、碎屑或岩石构成,可以恢复这些系统的隐含功能。本文进一步讨论了几十年来科学研究记录的水獭坝和人为 NIDS 的功能相似性和能力。此外,我们提出了一个新的、基于证据的发现,即 NIDS 可以在缺水的河岸带创造湿地,其土壤有机碳储量在土壤表层可达 200 至 1400 Mg C/ha。我们确定了 NIDS 的关键恢复作用,即减缓景观中的水排水速度,以便更多的水可以渗透并用于促进河流环境中的自然物理、化学和生物过程。具体来说,我们断言,可以通过恢复曾经存在的自然基础设施来逆转这些环境中水流的快速排水。然后,我们探讨了如何利用 NIDS 来恢复这些系统中的自然生物地球化学反馈循环。我们提供了如何利用 NIDS 来恢复这些反馈循环的例子,从美国西南部旱地溪流中安装 NIDS 中吸取的教训,如何扩大此类工作的规模,以及对缓解气候变化影响的意义。我们的综合论述描绘了如何利用 NIDS 进行恢复,以支持适应和保护与气候相关的干扰和压力,如干旱、水资源短缺、洪水、热浪、沙尘暴、野火、生物多样性丧失和粮食不安全。