6533b85efe1ef96bd12bfb0e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

River bioassessment and the preservation of threatened species: Towards acceptable biological quality criteria

Jukka AroviitaJukka AroviitaHeikki HämäläinenHeikki Mykrä

subject

EcologyEcologyBiodiversityGeneral Decision SciencesFreshwater ecosystemTaxonGeographyWater Framework DirectiveAbundance (ecology)Threatened speciesmedia_common.cataloged_instanceConservation statusEuropean unionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_common

description

Abstract A central objective of environmental management is to maintain biodiversity, including populations of threatened species. Freshwater ecosystems are increasingly assessed by their biotic properties, but whether the resulting classifications of biotic condition are sufficient to protect species with conservation status has received very little consideration. We used data from 225 reference and impacted river sites from Finland to examine whether the occurrence and abundance of threatened macroinvertebrate species (TS) are associated with a commonly used estimate of biological condition (Observed-to-Expected number of predicted taxa of macroinvertebrates or O/E-ratio of taxonomic completeness, based on a predictive model). We suggest that a minimal acceptable condition below which restoration is needed, equivalent to, e.g. ‘good’ ecological status described by the European Union Water Framework Directive, should also ensure the occurrence of TS populations. We therefore followed conventional procedures for condition assessment, and examined two classifications by using the 10th or 25th percentiles of a reference O/E-distribution as alternative upper boundaries for the acceptable condition. The number and abundance of TS, and occurrence of individual TS showed positive relationships with the O/E. However, particularly if the 10th percentile threshold was used, there were only few occurrences and low abundance of TS in the suggested ‘good’ condition. The results imply that conventional criteria for satisfactory condition may not be sufficient for preservation of threatened river macroinvertebrates. However, our approach could bring an objective, meaningful, and societally acceptable means for setting site quality criteria in freshwater assessment.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2009.12.007