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Blue consequences of the green bioeconomy: Clear‐cutting intensifies the harmful impacts of land drainage on stream invertebrate biodiversity
- Source :
- Journal of Applied Ecology.
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2021.
-
Abstract
- 1. Growing bioeconomy is increasing the pressure to clear-cut drained peatland forests. Yet, the cumulative effects of peatland drainage and clear-cutting on the biodiversity of recipient freshwater ecosystems are largely unknown. 2. We studied the isolated and combined effects of peatland drainage and clear-cutting on stream macroinvertebrate communities. We further explored whether the impact of these forestry-driven catchment alterations to benthic invertebrates is related to stream size. We quantified the impact on invertebrate biodiversity by comparing communities in forestry-impacted streams to expected communities modelled with a multi-taxon niche model. 3. The impact of clear-cutting of drained peatland forests exceeded the sum of the independent effects of drainage and clear-cutting, indicating a synergistic interaction between the two disturbances in small streams. Peatland drainage reduced benthic biodiversity in both small and large streams, whereas clear-cutting did the same only in small streams. Small headwater streams were more sensitive to forestry impacts than the larger downstream sites. 4. We found 11 taxa (out of 25 modelled) to respond to forestry disturbances. These taxa were mainly different from those previously reported as sensitive to forestry-driven alterations, indicating the context dependence of taxonomic responses to forestry. In contrast, most of the functional traits previously identified as responsive to agricultural sedimentation also responded to forestry pressures. In particular, taxa that live temporarily in hyporheic habitats, move by crawling, disperse actively in water, live longer than 1 year, use eggs as resistance form and obtain their food by scraping became less abundant than expected, particularly in streams impacted by both drainage and clear-cutting. 5. Synthesis and applications. Drained peatland forests in boreal areas are reaching maturity and will soon be harvested. Clear-cutting of these forests incurs multiple environmental hazards but previous studies have focused on terrestrial ecosystems. Our results show that the combined impacts of peatland drainage and clear-cutting may extend across ecosystem boundaries and cause significant biodiversity loss in recipient freshwater ecosystems. This information supports a paradigm shift in boreal forest management, whereby continuous-cover forestry based on partial harvest may provide the most sustainable approach to peatland forestry.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Clearcutting
hakkuut
consequences
clear-cutting
trenching
Biodiversity
01 natural sciences
logging
case study
suot
freshwater
turvemaat
Finland
biodiversity
2. Zero hunger
Ecology
Agroforestry
Logging
forestry
land drainage
selkärangattomat
metsät
ekologia
boreaalinen vyöhyke
forecasts
virtavedet
boreal zone
mallit (mallintaminen)
predictions
biotalous
harmful impacts
joet
vihreä talous
Ecology (disciplines)
ecological integrity
010603 evolutionary biology
peatland drainage
Green economy
green economy
modelling
metsätalous
tapaustutkimus
benthic invertebrates
zoobenthos
14. Life underwater
bioeconomy
Invertebrate
forests
ojitus
010604 marine biology & hydrobiology
Land drainage
ennusteet
avohakkuut
15. Life on land
rivers
biodiversiteetti
pohjaeläimistö
13. Climate action
Environmental science
predictive modelling
Predictive modelling
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 13652664 and 00218901
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Applied Ecology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....038b94264d8f1d95343d60a39aad0e88
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13889