Evaluation of the importance of ecosystem services (ES) of various wetlands is well reported with global and regional level research, but the degree to which spatial-temporal variations in water richness (availability of water) have had an effect on ES has not yet been examined. The present work is intended to investigate the influence of wetland fragmentation due to damming on wetland water richness and the impact of changes in water richness on the ecosystem service value (ESV) of the wetland-dominated rivers of the lower Punarbhaba Basin, India, and Bangladesh, as the case. Water richness models of pre- and post-dam periods have been constructed based on four hydro-ecological parameters (hydro-period, depth of water, consistency of water appearance, and wetland size) following the semi-quantitative analytic hierarchy process (AHP). ESV of different wetland types, with and without considering water richness effect, has been computed. The result indicates that the overall wetland area decreased from 73,563 to 52,123 km during the post-dam period. Approximately 53.8% of the high water-rich region is decreased. Total wetland ESV has been lowered by 63.4% from 1989 to 2019, with an average reduction rate of 2%. This is mainly due to the squeezing of the wetland area during the post-dam period. If the impact of water richness on ESV is considered, the scenario is found to be very distinct. Total ESV of various ESV areas amounted to $33 million during the pre-dam period and is reduced to $19.71 million during the post-dam period. If compared to the total ESV of the wetland without considering the effect of water richness, the calculated ESV gap was $105 million in pre-dam and $38 million in post-dam period indicating a widening of the gap. Maintaining the ES of wetland hydrological management, specifically the flow maintenance of river and riparian wetlands, is essential.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-14123-x | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
January 2025
Core Botanical Gardens/Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China.
In constructed wetlands (CWs) with multiple plant communities, population structure may change over time and these variations may ultimately influence water quality. However, in CWs with multiple plant communities, it is still unclear how population structure may change over time and how these variations ultimately influence water quality. Here, we established a CW featuring multiple plant species within a polder to investigate the variation in plant population structure and wastewater treatment effect for drainage water over the course of one year.
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January 2025
Fujian Key Laboratory of Special Marine Bio-Resources Sustainable Utilization, College of Life Sciences, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou 350117, China.
, known as a global red tide species, is a common red tide species found in Pingtan Island. To examine the bacterial community structure in different environments during the red tide period of on Pingtan Island, samples were collected from the Algal Bloom Area (ABA), Transition Area (TA), and Non-Algal Bloom Area (NBA) on 6 April 2022, and the environmental physicochemical factors and bacterial community were determined. The outbreak of red tide significantly impacted the water quality and bacterial community structure in the affected sea area.
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January 2025
Institute of Science and Technology, Niigata University, Niigata 950-2181, Japan.
This study evaluates the potential of using pond water eDNA to reflect the surrounding terrestrial plant communities, aiming to develop a sustainable, large-scale, and long-term monitoring method for plant diversity in forest ecosystems. Water samples were collected four times from two ponds with different vegetation types during the late spring to autumn seasons in Japan. eDNA was extracted from dissolved particles fractionated by sequential filtration through pore sizes of 200 µm, 5 µm, and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
January 2025
Hull International Fisheries Institute, School of Natural Sciences, University of Hull, Hull, UK.
Globally, fish have been severely affected by the widespread, chronic degradation of fresh waters, with a substantial proportion of species declining in abundance or range in recent decades. This has especially been the case in densely populated countries with an industrial heritage and intensive agriculture, where the majority of river catchments have been affected by deteriorations in water quality and changes in land use. This study used a spatially and temporally extensive dataset, encompassing 16,124 surveys at 1180 sites representing a wide range of river typologies and pressures, to examine changes in the fish populations of England's rivers over four decades (1980s-2010s).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
January 2025
School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, James Hutton Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FE, UK.
Whether metazoan diversification during the Cambrian Radiation was driven by increased marine oxygenation remains highly debated. Repeated global oceanic oxygenation events have been inferred during this interval, but the degree of shallow marine oxygenation and its relationship to biodiversification and clade appearance remain uncertain. To resolve this, we interrogate an interval from ~527 to 519 Ma, encompassing multiple proposed global oceanic oxygenation events.
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