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Implications on food production of the changing water cycle in the Vietnamese Mekong Delta النص الكامل
2020
Boretti, Alberto
The Mekong Delta is sinking and shrinking due to excessive groundwater withdrawal for growing agricultural and other uses, coupled to reduced flow of water and sediments caused by upstream dams, growing upstream water uses and riverbed mining, reduced replenishment of aquifers, soil compaction, infrastructural extension, and thermo-steric sea level rise. Salinization of soil and aquifers, depletion of aquifers, constraints to fish migration, increased pollution, reduced flow of nutrients, deterioration of the coastal mangrove belt, general degradation of the ecosystem, and loss of emerged land, make the production of food from agriculture and fisheries more difficult, while also limiting the availability of clean fresh water for domestic uses. The subsidence generated by excessive groundwater withdrawal is more than one order of magnitude larger than the thermo-steric sea level rise. Particularly relevant is also the effect of the reduced flow of water, and sediments caused by upstream dams and growing upstream water uses. These drivers are changing the low-lying Mekong Delta, with dramatic impacts on food security expected by as early as 2050, and the possible complete disappearance of the Mekong delta as we know by 2100. While technological developments and enforcement of mitigation and adaptation strategies expected to overcome the most part of the short term issues, with production from aquaculture actually expected to dramatically rise to 2050, but contemporary reduced growth, if not reduction in the agricultural output, these measures may not be enough by 2100. The current rates of development, in both economy and population, are, not sustainable.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Effects of food supplies and water temperature on growth rates of two species of freshwater tropical shrimps النص الكامل
2015
Pérez‐Reyes, Omar | Crowl, Todd A. | Covich, Alan P.
Growth rates of individual freshwater shrimp of the species Atya lanipes and Xiphocaris elongata were measured in a second‐order stream in the Luquillo Experimental Forest in Puerto Rico over 10 years (1997–2007). Shrimp living at lower altitudes in warmer water and wider stream channels with more algal and detrital foods were predicted to grow and reproduce more rapidly. Shrimp were marked and recaptured periodically in pools located at three altitudes to determine whether temperature affected growth rates among individual A. lanipes and X. elongata. Mean annual water temperatures ranged from 20 to 24 °C with the uppermost pool being cooler than the lower pools. Mean annual growth rates for Atya and Xiphocaris were 0.27 and 0.1 mm carapace length, respectively, for all three populations. Differences in growth were partially influenced by how each species obtains its food. Atya is a filter feeder and scraper and has continuous access to suspended organic particles and biofilms. The slower growth rate for Xiphocaris elongata is most likely a result of the wider range in quality and accessibility of food resources. Differences in pool morphology and depths probably affected differences in food availability. Increased leaf litter retention in the deeper upper and lower pools probably increased shrimp growth rates, while washout of leaf litter from the relatively shallow, elongate mid‐altitude pool decreased Atya lanipes growth rates. These long‐lived, slow‐growing shrimp species transform a wide range of organic materials into their biomass. Because of the slow growth rates of these detritivores shrimp, tropical storms, hurricanes, droughts or other disturbances could have persistent, long‐term impacts on detrital processing and on the populations of their predators.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Stable isotope ratios of emergent adult aquatic insects can be used as indicators of water pollution in the hyporheic food web النص الكامل
2020
Alam, Md Khorshed | Negishi, Junjiro N. | Rahman, Mirza A.T.M Tanvir | Rodulfo Tolod, Janine
Bio-assessment protocols for the subsurface domain of river channels (i.e. hyporheic zone) are scarce despite of the known importance of its ecological function in river ecosystems. The larvae of the Alloperla ishikariana Plecoptera species inhabit the hyporheic zone. Therefore, we examined whether emergent adult A. ishikariana could serve as proxy indicators of the effects of pollution in the hyporheic food web. The study site comprised a 15-km stretch of a gravel bed river in Hokkaido, Japan, from which all invertebrates were collected from the riverbed at a depth of 30–50 cm, and emergent A. ishikariana adults were sampled in riparian zones. Water quality changed gradually along the river owing to the effects of a wastewater treatment plant and surrounding land uses. Nitrogen and carbon stable isotope ratios (SIRs) of epilithic biofilms, hyporheic particulate organic matter (POM), benthic POM, and invertebrates were used to determine the major basal carbon sources, the effects of water pollution on the hyporheic zone, and the trophic positions of dominant invertebrates. Generalized linear (mixed) models were used for statistical testing and modeling. Amphipoda and the larvae of A. ishikariana were considered as top predators and secondary consumers in the hyporheic food web, respectively. The observed similarity in water quality between the hyporheic and surface water suggested a large degree of hydrological exchange between the two zones, and resulted in positive increases in the nitrogen SIRs of hyporheic invertebrates, including A. ishikariana larvae, in proportion to nitrate levels in the surface water. The nitrogen SIRs of A. ishikariana adults were significantly correlated with the nitrogen SIRs of their larvae within the same location (adjusted R² = 0.78), indicating that emerged adults can provide information on the longitudinal variability of the effects of synthetic nitrogen. In contrast, the carbon SIRs of adults did not predict those of their larvae, possibly reflecting the diverse feeding habitats of larvae. Overall, we demonstrated that adult aquatic insects emerging from the hyporheic zone can be used as indirect indicators of pollution-associated nutrient assimilation as well as the spatial heterogeneity of dietary carbon resources in hyporheic food web.
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