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Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

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MOB743: Measuring biodiversity. Bio-indicators and biomonitoring. Marinda Avenant Centre for Environmental Management University of the Free State 31 January 2012. Biological monitoring. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Bio-indicators and biomonitoring Marinda Avenant Centre for Environmental Management University of the Free State 31 January 2012 MOB743: Measuring biodiversity
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Page 1: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Marinda AvenantCentre for Environmental Management

University of the Free State

31 January 2012

MOB743: Measuring biodiversityMOB743: Measuring biodiversity

Page 2: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Biological monitoring

The systematic use of biological responses (or ecological indicators) to measure and evaluate anthropogenic changes to the environment with the purpose of using this information in quality control programs.

The core principle of biomonitoring is to detect divergence from biological integrity (especially divergence attributable to human actions). (Karr, 1999).

Page 3: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Where has it all started? Measuring biological integrity

1900s Quantitative indices

Indicator sp.; guilds; sp. Richness; sp. Diversity; similarity indices etc.

Clean Water Act of 1972

Index of Biotic Integrity IBI (Karr et al., 1986) Multi-metric index Integrative ecological index that

directly relates fish communities to other biotic and abiotic components of the ecosystem.

Page 4: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Where has it all started? 1972 Clean Water Act (USA) mandated:

“Protection of River health… restoring and maintaining the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters”.

Page 5: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Where has it all started? Measuring biological integrity

1900s Quantitative indices

Indicator sp.; guilds; sp. Richness; sp. Diversity; similarity indices etc.

Clean Water Act of 1972

Index of Biotic Integrity IBI (Karr et al., 1986) Multi-metric index Integrative ecological index that

directly relates fish communities to other biotic and abiotic components of the ecosystem.

Page 6: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Integration of land use impacts on drivers, habitats & biological responses

Louw & Kleynhans, 2007

Page 7: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Where has it all started? In South African context

SASS – Chutter (1972) 1990s FAII (Kleynhans, 1999) FAII takes into account:

Relative intolerances of fish species

Frequency of occurrence General health & well-

being

FRAI; MIRAI; VEGRAI

Page 8: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Biomonitoring of water resources required by Law

National Water Act (1998) Chapter 14 recognizes

monitoring of water resource quality as an integral part of water resources management

National Water Resources Strategy (NWRS) Need different monitoring

systems to give a comprehensive expression of the state of the environment

Page 9: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Concepts of “River health” and “Ecological integrity”

Page 10: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

“River Health” concept

River health can be defined as the degree to which the three main physical & chemical attributes of a river (its energy source, water quality and flow regime), plus its biota and their habitats, match the natural conditions at all scales. (Karr, 1991)

Page 11: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

What is Ecological Integrity?

The capability of an ecosystem to support and maintain a resilient community of organisms having a species composition, diversity, and functional organisation comparable to that of natural habitats in the region. ( Adapted from Karr & Dudley, 1981).

Ecological integrity = habitat integrity + biological integrity + physical-chemical integrity

Ecological integrity = habitat integrity + biological integrity + physical-chemical integrity

Page 12: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 13: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Ecological integrity

Nothing alive

Severe disturbance

Gradient of biological condition

Gradient of human disturbance

Pristine

No disturbance

Unhealthy

Not sustainable

Healthy

Sustainable

Biological integrity

Threshold(After Karr & Chu, 1999)

LOW ecological integrity HIGH ecological integrity

Page 14: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Can we determine ecological integrity?

Biotic integrity can also be viewed as a measure of the degree to which the present biological condition of a system has been modified relative to its natural state.

Page 15: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Natural state (Reference conditions)

Page 16: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Natural state or reference condition

Condition with no or minimal anthropogenic stress.

In the absence of ecosystems in their “natural state” the concept of “best attainable” is relevant.

Reference state = benchmark

Page 17: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

How do we determine reference conditions?

Locate the least impacted sites, either in the same river zone or in a river that is ecologically similar.

Use results of historical surveys before human impacts, or from ecological similar rivers. Use historical photographs and land cover data.

Expert knowledge. “Ecoregions” “Virtual ecosystems”

Page 18: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Present ecological state

Page 19: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Conceptual model for assessingthe ecological state of an ecosystem (cf. RHP)

Present ecological statePresent ecological state

Page 20: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Present ecological state (PES) The current state of affairs! - How much does the

current state differs from the natural state Expressed in terms of the following components:

Physical integrity/Drivers Geomorphology Hydrology Physico-chemical integrity

Biological integrity/response Ecostatus

Integrated state

Page 21: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Description of PES

Score % Class Description

90-100 A Unmodified or approximates natural conditions closely

80-89 B Largely natural with few modification

60-79 C Moderately modified

40-59 D Largely modified

20-39 E Seriously modified

0-19 F Critically modified

Page 22: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Ecological categories

A

Unhealthy

Not sustainable

Healthy

Sustainable

Biological integrity

Threshold

Score % Class Description

90-100 A Unmodified or approximates natural conditions closely

80-89 B Largely natural with few modification

60-79 C Moderately modified

40-59 D Largely modified

20-39 E Seriously modified

0-19 F Critically modified

F E BCD

Page 23: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Tools we use?

Page 24: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

What do you need to assess the ecological integrity of an ecosystem?

Effective tools to measure the “health” of rivers at scales large enough to be useful for management.

These tools should be comprehensive, sensitive and quantitative tools (indicators) that are able to integrate and assess the conditions of each of the mentioned components (physical, chemical & biological) of an ecosystem.

Page 25: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Why are chemical analyses not enough? The results reflect the

conditions at the exact time of sampling.

It is impossible to measure all different chemical substances.

Some of the most toxic substances occur in minute quantities, often below detection limits (Day, 2000).

Chemical measures cannot be assumed to reflect the health of biota.Chemical measures cannot be assumed to reflect the health of biota.

Page 26: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

“Integrators” of information

Biological communities: Reflect overall ecological

integrity (chemical, physical & biological)

Integrate the effects of different stressors in the catchment – aggregate impact

Integrate the stresses over time & provide an ecological measure of fluctuating environmental conditions.

Page 27: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 28: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Patterns in community response to stress are used to

determine biological integrity & ecological function

Page 29: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Ecological Indicators (Tools)

The tools (indicators) used for assessing the complex variables that constitutes river health need to be:

Ecologically based Efficient Rapid Consistently applicable in

different regions

Page 30: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Ecological indicators (Tools)

Indicator species Resident communities (e.g. fish, invertebrates)

reflect (or integrate) chemical & physical impacts in a time-related manner, and are therefore regarded as good indicators of overall biological integrity.

Page 31: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Macro-invertebrates Good indicators of localised conditions Integrate effects of short-term env variations Sampling relatively easy, requires few people and

inexpensive gear Minimal detrimental effect on resident biota. Macro-invertebrates abundant in most streams.

Page 32: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Fish

Good indicators of long-term effects & broad habitat conditions

Fish assemblages represents various trophic levels.

Env requirements & life-history of (relatively) fish well-known

Page 33: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Quantitative Indices

Page 34: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Interpretation of results obtained by means of biomonitoring.

The information obtained by biomonitoring should be simplified to be of use to resource managers, conservationists & the public.

A biological index integrates and summarises the biological data within an indicator group.

Biological indices therefore quantify the condition of river health with a numeric output.

Page 35: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

State of the Modder River

Page 36: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 37: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

SASS5

Page 38: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 39: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 40: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring
Page 41: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

The value of biomonitoring

Is it appropriate technology?

Page 42: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Biomonitoring is good for: Surveillance of the

general ecological state of aquatic systems

Assessment of impacts (before & after)

Audit of compliance with ecological objectives or regulatory standards

Detection of long-term trends in the environment

Page 43: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

Biomonitoring is good for:

To integrate information…

To provide strong scientific support in the absence of a full understanding of properties and interactions of complex systems being assessed

As an element of environmental management and an NB method (tool) in determining the state of the aquatic environment.

Page 44: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

To summarize: Biomonitoring is used to track, evaluate and

communicate change in the condition of living ecosystems as a result of human impacts.

Biomonitoring, therefore, identifies ecological risks that are NB to human health and well-being

The goal is not to document and understand ALL the variation that arises in natural systems.Limitations:

Not useful as early warning system!

Difficult to account for natural variables!

Sampling labour intensive & time-consuming!

Page 45: Bio-indicators and biomonitoring

While science thrives on good questions,management needs GOOD ANSWERS,

as quickly and cheaply as possible.

It’s a trade-off betweenSPEED and ACCURACY

In conclusion:


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