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Ecological Forecasting and the Urbanization of Stream Ecosystems: Challenges for Economists,Hydrologists, Geomorphologists,and Ecologists
Authors:Christer?Nilsson  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:christer.nilsson@eg.umu.se"   title="  christer.nilsson@eg.umu.se"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,James E.?Pizzuto,Glenn E.?Moglen,Margaret A.?Palmer,Emily H.?Stanley,Nancy E.?Bockstael,Lisa C.?Thompson
Affiliation:(1) Landscape Ecology Group, Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umeå University, Uminova Science Park, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden;(2) Department of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Mid Sweden University, SE-851 70 Sundsvall, Sweden;(3) Department of Geology, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA;(4) Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA;(5) Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA;(6) Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin, 680 North Park Street, Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1492, USA;(7) Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA;(8) National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California–Santa Barbara, 735 State Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101 , USA
Abstract:The quantity and quality of freshwater resources are now being seriously threatened, partly as a result of extensive worldwide changes in land use, and scientists are often called upon by policy makers and managers to predict the ecological consequences that these alterations will have for stream ecosystems. The effects of the urbanization of stream ecosystems in the United States over the next 20 years are of particular concern. To address this issue, we present a multidisciplinary research agenda designed to improve our forecasting of the effects of land-use change on stream ecosystems. Currently, there are gaps in both our knowledge and the data that make it difficult to link the disparate models used by economists, hydrologists, geomorphologists, and ecologists. We identify a number of points that practitioners in each discipline were not comfortable compromising on—for example, by assuming an average condition for a given variable. We provide five instructive examples of the limitations to our ability to forecast the fate of stream and riverine ecosystems one drawn from each modeling step: (a) Accurate economic methods to forecast land-use changes over long periods (such as 20 years) are not available, especially not at spatially explicit scales; (b) geographic data are not always available at the appropriate resolution and are not always organized in categories that are hydrologically, ecologically, or economically meaningful; (c) the relationship between low flows and land use is sometimes hard to establish in anthropogenically affected catchments; (d) bed mobility, suspended sediment load, and channel form—all of which are important for ecological communities in streams—are difficult to predict; and (e) species distributions in rivers are not well documented, and the data that do exist are not always publicly available or have not been sampled at accurate scales, making it difficult to model ecological responses to specified levels of environmental change. Meeting these challenges will require both interdisciplinary cooperation and a reviewed commitment to intradisciplinary research in the fields of economics, geography, quantitative spatial analysis, hydrology, geomorphology, and ecology.Present address for L.C.T.: Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology Department, University of California–Davis, Davis, California 95616, USA.
Keywords:land-use change  ecological forecasts  limitations of modeling  streams  urbanization  watersheds
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