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Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers

Understanding how anthropogenic pressures affect river ecological status is pivotal to designing effective management strategies. Knowledge on river aquatic habitats status in Europe has increased tremendously since the introduction of the European Union Water Framework Directive, yet heterogeneitie...

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Autores principales: Vigiak, Olga, Udias, Angel, Pistocchi, Alberto, Zanni, Michela, Aloe, Alberto, Grizzetti, Bruna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098054/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34220341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107684
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author Vigiak, Olga
Udias, Angel
Pistocchi, Alberto
Zanni, Michela
Aloe, Alberto
Grizzetti, Bruna
author_facet Vigiak, Olga
Udias, Angel
Pistocchi, Alberto
Zanni, Michela
Aloe, Alberto
Grizzetti, Bruna
author_sort Vigiak, Olga
collection PubMed
description Understanding how anthropogenic pressures affect river ecological status is pivotal to designing effective management strategies. Knowledge on river aquatic habitats status in Europe has increased tremendously since the introduction of the European Union Water Framework Directive, yet heterogeneities in mandatory monitoring and reporting still limit identification of patterns at continental scale. Concurrently, several model and data-based indicators of anthropogenic pressures to freshwater that cover the continent consistently have been developed. The objective of this work was to create European maps of the probability of occurrence of river conditions, namely failure to achieve good ecological status, or to be affected by specific pervasive impacts. To this end, we applied logistic regression methods to model the river conditions as functions of continental-scale water pressure indicators. The prediction capacity of the models varied with river condition: the probability to fail achieving good ecological status, and occurrence of nutrient and organic pollution were rather well predicted; conversely, chemical (other than nutrient and organic) pollution and alteration of habitats due to hydrological or morphological changes were poorly predicted. The most important indicators explaining river conditions were the shares of agricultural and artificial land, mean annual net abstractions, share of pollution loads from point sources, and the share of upstream river length uninterrupted by barriers. The probability of failing to achieve good ecological status was estimated to be high (>60%) for 36% of the considered river network of about 1.6 M km. Occurrence of impact of nutrient pollution was estimated high (>60%) in 26% of river length and that of organic pollution 20%. The maps are built upon information reported at country level pursuant EU legal obligations, as well as indicators generated from European scale models and data: both sources are affected by epistemic uncertainty. In particular, reported information depend on data collection scoping and schemes, as well as national knowledge and interpretation of river system pressures. In turn, water pressure indicators are affected by heterogeneous biases due to incomplete or incorrect inputs and uncertainty of models adopted. Lack of effective reach- and site-scale indicators may hamper detection of locally relevant impacts, for example in explaining alteration of habitats due to morphological changes. The probability maps provide a continental snapshot of current river conditions, and offer an alternative source of information on river aquatic habitats, which may help filling in knowledge gaps. Foremost, the analysis demonstrates the need for developing more effective continental-scale indicators for hydromorphological alterations and chemical pollution.
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spelling pubmed-80980542021-07-01 Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers Vigiak, Olga Udias, Angel Pistocchi, Alberto Zanni, Michela Aloe, Alberto Grizzetti, Bruna Ecol Indic Article Understanding how anthropogenic pressures affect river ecological status is pivotal to designing effective management strategies. Knowledge on river aquatic habitats status in Europe has increased tremendously since the introduction of the European Union Water Framework Directive, yet heterogeneities in mandatory monitoring and reporting still limit identification of patterns at continental scale. Concurrently, several model and data-based indicators of anthropogenic pressures to freshwater that cover the continent consistently have been developed. The objective of this work was to create European maps of the probability of occurrence of river conditions, namely failure to achieve good ecological status, or to be affected by specific pervasive impacts. To this end, we applied logistic regression methods to model the river conditions as functions of continental-scale water pressure indicators. The prediction capacity of the models varied with river condition: the probability to fail achieving good ecological status, and occurrence of nutrient and organic pollution were rather well predicted; conversely, chemical (other than nutrient and organic) pollution and alteration of habitats due to hydrological or morphological changes were poorly predicted. The most important indicators explaining river conditions were the shares of agricultural and artificial land, mean annual net abstractions, share of pollution loads from point sources, and the share of upstream river length uninterrupted by barriers. The probability of failing to achieve good ecological status was estimated to be high (>60%) for 36% of the considered river network of about 1.6 M km. Occurrence of impact of nutrient pollution was estimated high (>60%) in 26% of river length and that of organic pollution 20%. The maps are built upon information reported at country level pursuant EU legal obligations, as well as indicators generated from European scale models and data: both sources are affected by epistemic uncertainty. In particular, reported information depend on data collection scoping and schemes, as well as national knowledge and interpretation of river system pressures. In turn, water pressure indicators are affected by heterogeneous biases due to incomplete or incorrect inputs and uncertainty of models adopted. Lack of effective reach- and site-scale indicators may hamper detection of locally relevant impacts, for example in explaining alteration of habitats due to morphological changes. The probability maps provide a continental snapshot of current river conditions, and offer an alternative source of information on river aquatic habitats, which may help filling in knowledge gaps. Foremost, the analysis demonstrates the need for developing more effective continental-scale indicators for hydromorphological alterations and chemical pollution. Elsevier Science 2021-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8098054/ /pubmed/34220341 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107684 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Vigiak, Olga
Udias, Angel
Pistocchi, Alberto
Zanni, Michela
Aloe, Alberto
Grizzetti, Bruna
Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title_full Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title_fullStr Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title_full_unstemmed Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title_short Probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in European rivers
title_sort probability maps of anthropogenic impacts affecting ecological status in european rivers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8098054/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34220341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107684
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