Refinar búsqueda
Resultados 1-3 de 3
Water as a trophic currency in dryland food webs Texto completo
2014
Allen, Daniel C. | McCluney, Kevin E | Elser, Stephen R | Sabo, John L
Water is essential for life on Earth, yet little is known about how water acts as a trophic currency, a unit of value in determining species interactions in terrestrial food webs. We tested the relative importance of groundwater and surface water in riparian food webs by manipulating their availability in dryland floodplains. Primary consumers (crickets) increased in abundance in response to added surface water and groundwater (contained in moist leaves), and predators (spiders and lizards) increased in abundance in response to added surface water, in spite of the presence of a river, an abundant water source. Moreover, the relative magnitude of organism responses to added water was greatest at the most arid site and lowest at the least arid site, mirroring cricket recruitment, which was greatest at the least arid site and lowest at the most arid site. These results suggest that water may be a key currency in terrestrial dryland food webs, which has important implications for predicting ecosystem responses to human‐ and climate‐related changes in hydrology and precipitation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Fish, sediment and dams in the Mekong: How hydropower development affects water productivity and food supply Texto completo
2016
eric baran | joshua nasielski | eric guerin
Eric Baran, Eric Guerin, Joshua Nasielski, 'Fish, sediment and dams in the Mekong: How hydropower development affects water productivity and food supply', 2016
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Sustainability in the Food-Water-Ecosystem Nexus: The Role of Land Use and Land Cover Change for Water Resources and Ecosystems in the Kilombero Wetland, Tanzania Texto completo
2017
Leemhuis, Constanze | Thonfeld, Frank | Näschen, Kristian | Steinbach, Stefanie | Muro, Javier | Strauch, Adrian | López, Ander | Daconto, Giuseppe | Games, Ian | Diekkrüger, B. (Bernd)
Land Use Land Cover Change (LULCC) has a significant impact on water resources and ecosystems in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). On the basis of three research projects we aim to describe and discuss the potential, uncertainties, synergies and science-policy interfaces of satellite-based integrated research for the Kilombero catchment, comprising one of the major agricultural utilized floodplains in Tanzania. LULCC was quantified at the floodplain and catchment scale analyzing Landsat 5 and Sentinel 2 satellite imagery applying different adapted classification methodologies. LULC maps at the catchment scale serve as spatial input for the distributed, process-based ecohydrological model SWAT (Soil Water Assessment Tool) simulating the changes in the spatial and temporal water balance in runoff components caused by LULCC. The results reveal that over the past 26 years LULCC has significantly altered the floodplain and already shows an impact on the ecosystem by degrading the existing wildlife corridors. On the catchment scale the anomalies of the water balance are still marginal, but with the expected structural changes of the catchment there is an urgent need to increase the public awareness and knowledge of decision makers regarding the effect of the relationship between LULCC, water resources and environmental degradation.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]