Publication: Relationships among anthropogenic disturbances representative riparian and non-riparian herbaceous indicators (biomass and diversity), land use, and lotic water quality …
Type:
Article
Date
2014-09
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Abstract
This study was carried out to evaluate the
linkages among herbaceous plant biomass (i.e., aboveground and litter biomasses) and diversity (ShannonWiener index) in riparian and non-riparian areas, land
use, and lotic water quality (which included first- and
second-order natural streams, a canal, and a reach of a
lowland river). Herb stands selected were free from
anthropogenic disturbances such as farming and construction activities for a period of 3 years (this was the
dominant and peak frequency of disturbances of the
study area). The results suggested that herb indicators
are good representatives of the land use. However, land
use explanations for herb indicators were complex and
not universal for all lotic waters. The correlations between herb indicators and water quality were strong for
the low-order natural streams. In these streams, herb
indicators explained >36 % of the total variation with
several statistically significant herb indicators.
However, the large river section showed weak correlations. Furthermore, the canal’s hydrology (connectivity
to sea) seemed to be more influential in shaping its water
quality. This study demonstrated that the rehabilitation
works with a span of 3–4 years using herbs in riparian
and/or non-riparian areas could significantly improve
water quality of low-order streams with natural origin.
Description
Keywords
Biomass., Diversity, Herbs, Lotic water quality, Non-riparian, Riparian
Citation
Gomes, P.I.A., Wai, O.W.H., Kularatne, R.K.A. et al. Relationships Among Anthropogenic Disturbances Representative Riparian and Non-Riparian Herbaceous Indicators (Biomass and Diversity), Land Use, and Lotic Water Quality: Implications on Rehabilitation of Lotic Waters. Water Air Soil Pollut 225, 2060 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-014-2060-4
