A framework for evaluating food-web responses to hydrological manipulations in riverine systems.

J Environ Manage

The Murray-Darling Freshwater Research Centre, La Trobe University, PO Box 821, Wodonga, VIC 3689, Australia; CSIRO Land and Water, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Environmental flows are designed to restore water systems affected by human use, primarily to support target species populations.
  • Despite this focus, there's a lack of integration of food-web and trophic dynamics in assessing these flows.
  • The authors propose a framework for including these dynamics in monitoring programs, emphasizing the need for clear objectives and the use of various analytical methods to better understand food webs in relation to environmental flows.

Article Abstract

Environmental flows are used to restore elements of the hydrological regime altered by human use of water. One of the primary justifications and purposes for environmental flows is the maintenance of target species populations but, paradoxically, there has been little emphasis on incorporating the food-web and trophic dynamics that determine population-level responses into the monitoring and evaluation of environmental flow programs. We develop a generic framework for incorporating trophic dynamics into monitoring programs to identify the food-web linkages between hydrological regimes and population-level objectives of environmental flows. These linkages form the basis for objective setting, ecological targets and indicator selection that are necessary for planning monitoring programs with a rigorous scientific basis. Because there are multiple facets of trophic dynamics that influence energy production and transfer through food webs, the specific objectives of environmental flows need to be defined during the development of monitoring programs. A multitude of analytical methods exist that each quantify distinct aspects of food webs (e.g. energy production, prey selection, energy assimilation), but no single method can provide a basis for holistic understanding of food webs. Our paper critiques a range of analytical methods for quantifying attributes of food webs to inform the setting, monitoring and evaluation of trophic outcomes of environmental flows and advance the conceptual understanding of trophic dynamics in river-floodplain systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.07.040DOI Listing

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