Christiane Schulz-Zunkel, Carolin Seele-Dilbat, Christine Anlanger, Martina Baborowski, Elisabeth Bondar-Kunze, Mario Brauns, Cedric M. Gapinski, Ralf Gründling, Christina von Haaren, Thomas Hein, Klaus Henle, Frank W. Junge, Hans. D. Kasperidus, Katinka Koll, Lena Kretz, Georg Rast, Ingo Schnauder, Mathias Scholz, Heiko Schrenner, Agnieszka Sendek, Claudia Sprössig, Claudia Nogueira Tavares, Michael Vieweg, Wolf von Tümpling, Markus Weitere, Christian Wirth, Tobias Wunsch, Frank Dziock
{"title":"河漫滩生态系统的有效恢复措施:从“Wilde Mulde”项目中吸取的经验教训","authors":"Christiane Schulz-Zunkel, Carolin Seele-Dilbat, Christine Anlanger, Martina Baborowski, Elisabeth Bondar-Kunze, Mario Brauns, Cedric M. Gapinski, Ralf Gründling, Christina von Haaren, Thomas Hein, Klaus Henle, Frank W. Junge, Hans. D. Kasperidus, Katinka Koll, Lena Kretz, Georg Rast, Ingo Schnauder, Mathias Scholz, Heiko Schrenner, Agnieszka Sendek, Claudia Sprössig, Claudia Nogueira Tavares, Michael Vieweg, Wolf von Tümpling, Markus Weitere, Christian Wirth, Tobias Wunsch, Frank Dziock","doi":"10.1002/iroh.202102086","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Over the last 40 years, a growing number of restoration projects have been implemented to improve the ecological conditions of highly degraded rivers and their floodplains. Despite considerable investment in these projects, information is still limited about the effectiveness and the success of such river restoration measures, mainly due to a lack of standardised and interdisciplinary assessment approaches. During the project ‘Wilde Mulde—Restoration of a dynamic riverine landscape in Central Germany’, we implemented hydromorphological restoration measures (installation of large wood, removal of rip-rap, reconnection of a former river side-arm) along a lowland river in Central Germany. We carried out intensive scientific monitoring of biodiversity, hydromorphology, ecosystem functions and services, as well as socio-economic aspects. A Before/After-Control/Impact (BACI) design was used to identify the spatial and temporal effects of the restoration measures and to distinguish them from changes caused by background variation. For this, we used a comprehensive set of indicators, including abiotic (flow velocity, diversity of riverbed topography, and flow resistance), biological (ecosystem respiration, macroinvertebrates, fish, carabids, vegetation, and birds) and socio-economic (acceptance and public awareness) indicators as well as the ecosystem service indicator aesthetic quality of the landscape. To meet the inherent challenges of such a large-scale field experiment, like unpredictable environmental conditions, we used an experimental approach that allowed us to demonstrate a measurable success of the implemented restoration measures. The majority of the abiotic and some of the biological and socio-economic indicators at the restored sites approached values of a natural reference site while already deviating from values of a nonnatural reference site two years after restoration. In addition to the applied interdisciplinary approach, multiple scales of field investigations and data analyses are essential as key components for evaluating successful river and floodplain restoration projects.</p>","PeriodicalId":54928,"journal":{"name":"International Review of Hydrobiology","volume":"107 1-2","pages":"9-21"},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-02-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/iroh.202102086","citationCount":"7","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Effective restoration measures in river-floodplain ecosystems: Lessons learned from the ‘Wilde Mulde’ project\",\"authors\":\"Christiane Schulz-Zunkel, Carolin Seele-Dilbat, Christine Anlanger, Martina Baborowski, Elisabeth Bondar-Kunze, Mario Brauns, Cedric M. Gapinski, Ralf Gründling, Christina von Haaren, Thomas Hein, Klaus Henle, Frank W. Junge, Hans. D. Kasperidus, Katinka Koll, Lena Kretz, Georg Rast, Ingo Schnauder, Mathias Scholz, Heiko Schrenner, Agnieszka Sendek, Claudia Sprössig, Claudia Nogueira Tavares, Michael Vieweg, Wolf von Tümpling, Markus Weitere, Christian Wirth, Tobias Wunsch, Frank Dziock\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/iroh.202102086\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Over the last 40 years, a growing number of restoration projects have been implemented to improve the ecological conditions of highly degraded rivers and their floodplains. Despite considerable investment in these projects, information is still limited about the effectiveness and the success of such river restoration measures, mainly due to a lack of standardised and interdisciplinary assessment approaches. During the project ‘Wilde Mulde—Restoration of a dynamic riverine landscape in Central Germany’, we implemented hydromorphological restoration measures (installation of large wood, removal of rip-rap, reconnection of a former river side-arm) along a lowland river in Central Germany. We carried out intensive scientific monitoring of biodiversity, hydromorphology, ecosystem functions and services, as well as socio-economic aspects. A Before/After-Control/Impact (BACI) design was used to identify the spatial and temporal effects of the restoration measures and to distinguish them from changes caused by background variation. For this, we used a comprehensive set of indicators, including abiotic (flow velocity, diversity of riverbed topography, and flow resistance), biological (ecosystem respiration, macroinvertebrates, fish, carabids, vegetation, and birds) and socio-economic (acceptance and public awareness) indicators as well as the ecosystem service indicator aesthetic quality of the landscape. To meet the inherent challenges of such a large-scale field experiment, like unpredictable environmental conditions, we used an experimental approach that allowed us to demonstrate a measurable success of the implemented restoration measures. The majority of the abiotic and some of the biological and socio-economic indicators at the restored sites approached values of a natural reference site while already deviating from values of a nonnatural reference site two years after restoration. 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Effective restoration measures in river-floodplain ecosystems: Lessons learned from the ‘Wilde Mulde’ project
Over the last 40 years, a growing number of restoration projects have been implemented to improve the ecological conditions of highly degraded rivers and their floodplains. Despite considerable investment in these projects, information is still limited about the effectiveness and the success of such river restoration measures, mainly due to a lack of standardised and interdisciplinary assessment approaches. During the project ‘Wilde Mulde—Restoration of a dynamic riverine landscape in Central Germany’, we implemented hydromorphological restoration measures (installation of large wood, removal of rip-rap, reconnection of a former river side-arm) along a lowland river in Central Germany. We carried out intensive scientific monitoring of biodiversity, hydromorphology, ecosystem functions and services, as well as socio-economic aspects. A Before/After-Control/Impact (BACI) design was used to identify the spatial and temporal effects of the restoration measures and to distinguish them from changes caused by background variation. For this, we used a comprehensive set of indicators, including abiotic (flow velocity, diversity of riverbed topography, and flow resistance), biological (ecosystem respiration, macroinvertebrates, fish, carabids, vegetation, and birds) and socio-economic (acceptance and public awareness) indicators as well as the ecosystem service indicator aesthetic quality of the landscape. To meet the inherent challenges of such a large-scale field experiment, like unpredictable environmental conditions, we used an experimental approach that allowed us to demonstrate a measurable success of the implemented restoration measures. The majority of the abiotic and some of the biological and socio-economic indicators at the restored sites approached values of a natural reference site while already deviating from values of a nonnatural reference site two years after restoration. In addition to the applied interdisciplinary approach, multiple scales of field investigations and data analyses are essential as key components for evaluating successful river and floodplain restoration projects.
期刊介绍:
As human populations grow across the planet, water security, biodiversity loss and the loss of aquatic ecosystem services take on ever increasing priority for policy makers. International Review of Hydrobiology brings together in one forum fundamental and problem-oriented research on the challenges facing marine and freshwater biology in an economically changing world. Interdisciplinary in nature, articles cover all aspects of aquatic ecosystems, ranging from headwater streams to the ocean and biodiversity studies to ecosystem functioning, modeling approaches including GIS and resource management, with special emphasis on the link between marine and freshwater environments. The editors expressly welcome research on baseline data. The knowledge-driven papers will interest researchers, while the problem-driven articles will be of particular interest to policy makers. The overarching aim of the journal is to translate science into policy, allowing us to understand global systems yet act on a regional scale.
International Review of Hydrobiology publishes original articles, reviews, short communications, and methods papers.