| Literature DB >> 33482551 |
Markus Weitere1, Rolf Altenburger2, Christine Anlanger3, Martina Baborowski3, Ilona Bärlund4, Liza-Marie Beckers5, Dietrich Borchardt4, Werner Brack6, Lisa Brase7, Wibke Busch8, Antonis Chatzinotas9, Björn Deutschmann10, Jens Eligehausen11, Karin Frank12, Daniel Graeber4, Christian Griebler13, Jeske Hagemann4, Peter Herzsprung14, Henner Hollert15, Pedro A Inostroza5, Christoph G Jäger16, René Kallies17, Norbert Kamjunke3, Bernhard Karrasch3, Sigrid Kaschuba18, Andrew Kaus4, Bernd Klauer19, Kay Knöller20, Matthias Koschorreck14, Martin Krauss5, Julia V Kunz4, Marie J Kurz21, Matthias Liess22, Margarete Mages3, Christin Müller20, Matthias Muschket5, Andreas Musolff21, Helge Norf23, Florian Pöhlein14, Lena Reiber22, Ute Risse-Buhl3, Karl-Werner Schramm24, Mechthild Schmitt-Jansen8, Markus Schmitz15, Ulrike Strachauer4, Wolf von Tümpling3, Nina Weber18, Romy Wild3, Christine Wolf19, Mario Brauns3.
Abstract
Meeting ecological and water quality standards in lotic ecosystems is often failed due to multiple stressors. However, disentangling stressor effects and identifying relevant stressor-effect-relationships in complex environmental settings remain major challenges. By combining state-of-the-art methods from ecotoxicology and aquatic ecosystem analysis, we aimed here to disentangle the effects of multiple chemical and non-chemical stressors along a longitudinal land use gradient in a third-order river in Germany. We distinguished and evaluated four dominant stressor categories along this gradient: (1) Hydromorphological alterations: Flow diversity and substrate diversity correlated with the EU-Water Framework Directive based indicators for the quality element macroinvertebrates, which deteriorated at the transition from near-natural reference sites to urban sites. (2) Elevated nutrient levels and eutrophication: Low to moderate nutrient concentrations together with complete canopy cover at the reference sites correlated with low densities of benthic algae (biofilms). We found no more systematic relation of algal density with nutrient concentrations at the downstream sites, suggesting that limiting concentrations are exceeded already at moderate nutrient concentrations and reduced shading by riparian vegetation. (3) Elevated organic matter levels: Wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) and stormwater drainage systems were the primary sources of bioavailable dissolved organic carbon. Consequently, planktonic bacterial production and especially extracellular enzyme activity increased downstream of those effluents showing local peaks. (4) Micropollutants and toxicity-related stress: WWTPs were the predominant source of toxic stress, resulting in a rapid increase of the toxicity for invertebrates and algae with only one order of magnitude below the acute toxic levels. This toxicity correlates negatively with the contribution of invertebrate species being sensitive towards pesticides (SPEARpesticides index), probably contributing to the loss of biodiversity recorded in response to WWTP effluents. Our longitudinal approach highlights the potential of coordinated community efforts in supplementing established monitoring methods to tackle the complex phenomenon of multiple stress.Entities:
Keywords: Ecological functions; Effect based analyses; Indicators; Multiple stress; Running waters
Year: 2020 PMID: 33482551 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963