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Response of fish communities to multiple pressures: development of a total anthropogenic pressure intensity index

Authors :
Poikane, S.
Ritterbusch, D.
Argillier, C.
Bialokoz, W.
Blabolil, P.
Breine, J.
Jaarsma, N.G.
Krause, T.
Kubecka, J.
Lauridsen, T.L.
Nõges, P.
Peirson, G.
Virbickas, T.
European Commission - Joint Research Centre [Ispra] (JRC)
Institute of Inland Fisheries Potsdam-Sacrow
Risques, Ecosystèmes, Vulnérabilité, Environnement, Résilience (RECOVER)
Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)
aucun
Inland Fisheries Institute
Institute of Hydrobiology
Biology Centre of the Czech Academy of Science
Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO)
Nico Jaarsma
EDF (EDF)
Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Estonian University of Life Sciences (EMU)
Na Sádkách 7, 370 05 Č eské Bud ě jovice
Aarhus University [Aarhus]
Environment Agency
Nature Research Centre
Institute of Inland Fisheries
Research Institute for Nature and Forest
Estonian University of Life Science
Source :
Science of the Total Environment, Science of the Total Environment, Elsevier, 2017, 586, pp.502-511
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2017.

Abstract

International audience; Lakes in Europe are subject to multiple anthropogenic pressures, such as eutrophication, habitat degradation and alien species which are frequently inter-related. Therefore, effective assessment methods addressing multiple pressures are needed. In addition, these systems have to be harmonised (i.e. intercalibrated) to achieve common management objectives across Europe. Assessments of fish communities inform environmental policies on ecological conditions integrating the impacts of multiple pressures. However, the challenge is to ensure consistency in ecological assessments through time, across ecosystem types and across jurisdictional boundaries. To overcome the serious comparability issues between national assessment systems in Europe, a total anthropogenic pressure intensity (TAPI) index was developed as a weighed combination of most common pressures in European lakes that is validated against 10 national fish based water quality assessment systems using data from 556 lakes. Multi-pressure indices showed significantly higher correlations with fish indices than single-pressure indices. The best-performing index combines eutrophication, hydromorphological alterations and human use intensity of lakes. For specific lake types also biological pressures may constitute an important additional pressure. The best-performing index showed a strong correlation with eight fish-based national assessment systems. The developed best performing index can be used in lake management for assessing total anthropogenic pressure on lake ecosystems and creates a benchmark for comparison of fish assessments independent of fish community composition, size structure and fishing-gear. We argue that fish-based multiple-pressure assessment tools should be seen as complementary to single-pressure tools offering the major advantage of integrating direct and indirect effects of multiple pressures over large scales of space and time.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697 and 18791026
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment, Science of the Total Environment, Elsevier, 2017, 586, pp.502-511
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..e01a4def1b716242b13bf59dcc40fa42