University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
US Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center, Vicksburg, Mississippi, USA.
Integr Environ Assess Manag. 2024 Nov;20(6):2153-2161. doi: 10.1002/ieam.4767. Epub 2023 Apr 17.
Wetlands provide unique habitat functions that benefit society by provisioning food, recreation, and ecosystem sustainability. Warfare affects the habitats of wetland-dependent reptiles, amphibians, and birds in both positive and negative ways, and opportunities exist to improve the management of wildlife habitat using a warfare ecology framework. Recent events in Ukraine highlight these relationships and provide stimulus to further consider the implications of current events for natural resources. In response, this commentary highlights both degradational and positive impacts of warfare on wetland fauna during the cyclical preparation, active conflict, and recovery phases. For example, the active conflict phase often initiates ecological disturbance regimes that couple large-scale landscape alteration with the release of chemicals and other materials into wetlands, leading to reduced reproductive potential and population declines in wetland-dependent species (e.g., amphibians, waterfowl) along with decreased overall wetland biodiversity and habitat quality. In contrast, wetland-dependent wildlife can benefit from (1) conservation activities occurring on military installations maintained to support training activities and (2) restoration efforts initiated after the cessation of combat. For example, many threatened and endangered reptiles and amphibians find refugia on military lands in the USA and internationally, and international protections for wetland resources (including the Ramsar Convention) have been established to promote their sustainability and wise use. Additional research is needed to improve the protection of valuable wetland resources by further enhancing ongoing conservation and planning efforts and improving strategies to mitigate the negative impacts of warfare on wetland dependent species throughout each phase of the warfare ecology cycle. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2024;20:2153-2161. Published 2023. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC).
湿地提供独特的生境功能,通过提供食物、娱乐和生态系统可持续性使社会受益。战争以积极和消极的方式影响依赖湿地的爬行动物、两栖动物和鸟类的栖息地,并且有机会利用战争生态学框架来改善野生动物栖息地的管理。乌克兰的近期事件突出了这些关系,并促使人们进一步考虑当前事件对自然资源的影响。有鉴于此,本评论强调了战争在周期性准备、积极冲突和恢复阶段对湿地动物群的退化和积极影响。例如,积极冲突阶段通常会引发生态干扰,这种干扰会导致大规模景观改变,并将化学物质和其他物质释放到湿地中,从而导致湿地依赖物种(例如,两栖动物、水禽)的繁殖潜力降低和种群减少,以及湿地生物多样性和栖息地质量总体下降。相比之下,湿地依赖的野生动物可以从以下方面受益:(1)在军事设施上开展的保护活动,这些设施是为支持训练活动而维持的;(2)在战斗停止后启动的恢复工作。例如,许多受威胁和濒危的爬行动物和两栖动物在美国和国际上都在军事土地上找到避难所,国际上还制定了湿地资源保护(包括《拉姆萨尔公约》),以促进其可持续性和合理利用。需要开展更多的研究,通过进一步加强正在进行的保护和规划工作,以及改善缓解战争对湿地依赖物种各个阶段负面影响的战略,来改善对有价值的湿地资源的保护。2024 年,《综合环境评估与管理》第 20 卷:2153-2161。2023 年出版。本文为美国政府作品,在美国公有领域。《综合环境评估与管理》由 Wiley Periodicals LLC 代表环境毒理与化学学会(SETAC)出版。