Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development
Human alterations within wetlands and streams have resulted in a decrease in ecological functions and associated benefits to society. The scientific literature highlights the functional benefits provided by ecosystems including flood protection, nutrient cycling, and habitat maintenance. Additionall...
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2013
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Oceanography & Coastal Sciences |
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Oceanography & Coastal Sciences Berkowitz, Jacob Franklin Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
description |
Human alterations within wetlands and streams have resulted in a decrease in ecological functions and associated benefits to society. The scientific literature highlights the functional benefits provided by ecosystems including flood protection, nutrient cycling, and habitat maintenance. Additionally, legislation and regulatory policy require mitigation and restoration as compensation for declines in ecological functions. As a result, the need for practical, repeatable, and technically sound ecosystem assessment methods remains essential to natural resource management. However, few studies determine the validity of rapid assessment approaches by applying quantitative parameters, especially with respect to biogeochemical functions. We assessed biogeochemical functions applied to restored wetlands in the Mississippi River Valley, USA. Significantly higher rapid assessment outcomes were associated with increased ecosystem functionality (r=0.64-0.86). Findings suggest that rapid assessment tools serve as reliable proxies for measurements of nutrient and biogeochemical cycling. Further, a framework for identifying restoration trajectory metrics was established, with four rapid assessment variables yielded positive restoration trajectories within <20 years (r = 0.59-0.89). Rapid assessment components were classified as rapid response, response, and stable variables categories and restoration milestones should focus on rapid response variables. In order to evaluate rapid ecological assessment in different environments, we examined proxy measures of biogeochemical function in headwater stream systems. Biogeochemical cycling proxies of C and N input and processing significantly, positively correlated with the results of a rapid assessment approach (r = 0.64-0.81). Also, stream loading equations demonstrate that N and P transport, sediment, conductivity, and temperature significantly, negatively correlated with rapid assessment scores (r = -0.56-0.81). Significant differences in nutrient processing, stream loading, water quality, and rapid
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assessment results were also observed between headwater streams located in recently altered (e.g., mined) and older second growth forested catchments (U = 0.01-0.24). Findings indicate that rapid assessment scores respond to a combination of alteration type and recovery time. An analysis examining the time and economic requirements of biogeochemical proxy measurements highlights the benefits of rapid assessment methods in evaluating biogeochemical functions. Based on these findings, a technical standard for rapid ecological assessment was developed. The technical standard establishes nine testable components that promote validity and defensibility in the development and application of rapid ecological assessment approaches. |
author2 |
Corstanje, Ron |
author_facet |
Corstanje, Ron Berkowitz, Jacob Franklin |
author |
Berkowitz, Jacob Franklin |
author_sort |
Berkowitz, Jacob Franklin |
title |
Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
title_short |
Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
title_full |
Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
title_fullStr |
Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
title_full_unstemmed |
Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development |
title_sort |
incorporating science-based approaches into the rapid assessment of wetlands and streams: validation, restoration trajectory, and method development |
publisher |
LSU |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06182013-205633/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT berkowitzjacobfranklin incorporatingsciencebasedapproachesintotherapidassessmentofwetlandsandstreamsvalidationrestorationtrajectoryandmethoddevelopment |
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1716590088474853376 |
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ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-06182013-2056332013-07-01T03:14:14Z Incorporating Science-Based Approaches into the Rapid Assessment of Wetlands and Streams: Validation, Restoration Trajectory, and Method Development Berkowitz, Jacob Franklin Oceanography & Coastal Sciences Human alterations within wetlands and streams have resulted in a decrease in ecological functions and associated benefits to society. The scientific literature highlights the functional benefits provided by ecosystems including flood protection, nutrient cycling, and habitat maintenance. Additionally, legislation and regulatory policy require mitigation and restoration as compensation for declines in ecological functions. As a result, the need for practical, repeatable, and technically sound ecosystem assessment methods remains essential to natural resource management. However, few studies determine the validity of rapid assessment approaches by applying quantitative parameters, especially with respect to biogeochemical functions. We assessed biogeochemical functions applied to restored wetlands in the Mississippi River Valley, USA. Significantly higher rapid assessment outcomes were associated with increased ecosystem functionality (r=0.64-0.86). Findings suggest that rapid assessment tools serve as reliable proxies for measurements of nutrient and biogeochemical cycling. Further, a framework for identifying restoration trajectory metrics was established, with four rapid assessment variables yielded positive restoration trajectories within <20 years (r = 0.59-0.89). Rapid assessment components were classified as rapid response, response, and stable variables categories and restoration milestones should focus on rapid response variables. In order to evaluate rapid ecological assessment in different environments, we examined proxy measures of biogeochemical function in headwater stream systems. Biogeochemical cycling proxies of C and N input and processing significantly, positively correlated with the results of a rapid assessment approach (r = 0.64-0.81). Also, stream loading equations demonstrate that N and P transport, sediment, conductivity, and temperature significantly, negatively correlated with rapid assessment scores (r = -0.56-0.81). Significant differences in nutrient processing, stream loading, water quality, and rapid xii assessment results were also observed between headwater streams located in recently altered (e.g., mined) and older second growth forested catchments (U = 0.01-0.24). Findings indicate that rapid assessment scores respond to a combination of alteration type and recovery time. An analysis examining the time and economic requirements of biogeochemical proxy measurements highlights the benefits of rapid assessment methods in evaluating biogeochemical functions. Based on these findings, a technical standard for rapid ecological assessment was developed. The technical standard establishes nine testable components that promote validity and defensibility in the development and application of rapid ecological assessment approaches. Corstanje, Ron Nyman, John Bargu Ates, Sibel Wang, Jim DeLaune, Ronald White, John LSU 2013-06-30 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06182013-205633/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-06182013-205633/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached herein a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below and in appropriate University policies, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report. |