Dong‐Kyun Kim, Kwang-Seuk Jeong, Yuno Do, Hyun-Woo Kim, G. Joo
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Assessment of Stream Integrity in Relation to Neighboring Land Use Coverage
Landscape morphology of a watershed plays an important role on determination of the ecological health in the stream or river ecosystems. A habitat-riparian index system (HIS) is a newly developed metric to estimate stream naturalness in Korea. In this study, we focus on a predictive assessment of the HIS associated with stream integrity, and then aim to evaluate essential features of the stream integrity in conjunction with ambient land use patterns obtained from geographical information system (GIS). Concerning the stream health assessment, we applied a decision-tree model to the HIS prediction. As a results, the best models of the decision-trees exhibited a 72.2% accuracy in prediction of the stream health index, and also a 65.8% accuracy in classifying river catchments. A hierarchical structure of the decision tree models in effect, was able to identify and classify more influential land use patterns that could reflex stream integrity. We highlight that GIS-involved analyses and approaches accommodates a wide variety of benefits in a rapid assessment of ecological data associated with field measurements. Furthermore, such methodological applications will be able to become an effective alternative for efficient ecological health assessment in streams and rivers.
期刊介绍:
Cessation. Ekoloji is an international journal that focuses on papers that report results from original research on all disciplines engaged in the field of environmental research. We welcome articles that cover the entire spectrum of environmental problems and environmental pollutants, whether chemical, biological or physical. Its coverage extends to all environmentally related issues: air and water pollution, solid waste, noise, recycling, natural resources, ecology and environmental protection. It includes articles on basic and applied environmental pollution research, including environmental engineering and environmental health. All types of pollution are covered, including atmospheric pollutants, detergents, fertilizers, industrial effluents, metals, mining wastes, oil, pesticides, plastics, radioactive materials and sewage. It also includes research papers on ecological and environmental issues such as climate change, biodiversity. The primary criteria for publication are scientific quality and ecological/environmental significance.
The journal will be read and contributed to by biologists, applied ecologists, environmental scientists, natural resource specialists, environmental engineers, environmental health specialists, agro-ecologists, veterinaries, agricultural engineers, landscape planners and designers. The journal welcomes full "research papers" and short "research notes", only in the English language.