scoring - Aqualife
Transcription
scoring - Aqualife
12th ICOC Seoul, July 2014 Symposium Groundwater Quality and Copepods Global trends and environmental challenges in groundwater dependent ecosystems: the copepod response Diana M.P. Galassi University of L’Aquila - ITALY [email protected] 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 The “upside-down vision” of freshwater: the ground water All water which is below the surface of the ground in the saturation zone and in direct contact with the ground of the soil. [definition source: Directive 2000/60/EC (Water Framework Directive)] 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Groundwater Dependent Ecosystems (GDEs) are ecosystems which have their species composition and their natural ecological processes determined by groundwater (ARMCANZ & ANZECC, 1996) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Degree of dependency (after Hatton, 1998) Ecosystems Entirely Dependent on Groundwater (e.g. SGDEs) If groundwater lowers or modifies only slightly, then the ecosystem would essentially cease to be. Ecosystems Highly Dependent on Groundwater Moderate changes to groundwater discharge or water tables would lead to substantial decreases in the extent or health of the ecosystem. There is some significant chance that the ecosystem would collapse. Ecosystems with Proportional Dependence on Groundwater For a number of systems, it is likely that a unit change in the amount of groundwater will result in a proportional change in the health or extent of that ecosystem. Ecosystems which may only use Groundwater Opportunistically Groundwater may only play a significant role in the water balance of some ecosystems in times of extreme drought or briefly at the end of a dry season. Ecosystems with No Apparent Dependency on Groundwater There are a number of wetland ecosystems which do not depend on groundwater in any significant way. 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 State of the art in the scientific knowldge Natural drivers (left) and stressors (right) in different organism groups illustrating knowledge gaps After Stendera et al., 2012 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Upwelling zone in a glacial river http://www.nps.gov/dena/naturescience/upload/EcologyUpwellings2008_revised2012.pdf 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Upwelling at the Tirino Springs (Italy) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Unsaturated karst – Frasassi cave (Italy) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Saturated karst: the unique sulphidic karst of the Frasassi cave (Italy) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Pollutants in groundwater 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Projected change in mean annual and seasonal river flow between the climate change scenario (2071-2100) and the control period (1961-1990) http://www.eea.europa.eu/legal/copyright 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Groundwater quality status in Europe http://www.ngu.no/en-gb/ http://www.eea.europa.eu/data-andmaps/figures/chemical-status-of-groundwater-bodies 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Trends in groundwater abstraction Km3/year (after Margat & van der Gun, 2012) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Groundwater exploitation in Asia: main drivers 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Nitrates in groundwater in the Netherlands (Netherlands Environmental Agency, 2007) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Nitrogen contamination of groundwater in the U.S.A. 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Marine intrusion 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Soil and fractured aquifer pollution by chlorinated solvent spill 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Soil and aquifer pollution by oil tanks spills and leakages 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 It’s not enough: the «controversial» fracking Cavitation hydrovibration is a process using a device that fractures rock using a pressurized water pulse action on rock stratum to increase the degree of fracturing. The device is considered “green technology” and relies solely on water without the need for the toxic “chemical cocktail” employed in standard hydrofracturing. The real risk of water contamination comes from these flowback fluids leaking into streams or seeping down into groundwater after reaching the surface. 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 What can the groundwater fauna and the copepods tell us? Heavy contraints 1.Dramatic decline in taxonomy 2.Linnaean shortfall (Lomolino et al., 2006) 3.Inaccuracy in taxonomic identification 4.Generalization on ecological categorization based on highrank taxa 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Unpolluted GDEs: the case study of a rheo-limnocrenic spring in Italy 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Copepod response to natural drivers in unpolluted conditions Fiasca et al., J. Limnol., 2014 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Copepods as Active Exchange Describers Stygobite and non-stygobite copepods mirror the hydrogeological pattern After Di Lorenzo et al., 2013 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Stream and rivers once perennial are becoming intermittent 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 The hyporheic zone loses its biodiversity, copepods included X After Stream Corridor Restoration: Principles, Processes and Practices (1998) USDA National Conservation Center 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Altered river discharge: the dams Altered flow discharge determines a strong increase in riverbed sediments erosion and high instability of the hyporheic zone reference site The hyporheic community resulted impoverished and abundance of stygobiotic species dramatically lowered (Caschetto et al., 2013) 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Trends in species richness and abundances of copepods at the mid-section of the River Sagittario (Italy) Projection of sites on the first two ordination axes after MDS; stress = 0.12 1. Imperviousness - i.e. compacted riverbed 2. Pollution by NH4+and PO4312th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Hyporheic fauna response to global change in climate: the case study of the Rhone River After Dehedin et al., 2013 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Stygobiotic copepod response to groundwater withdrawal After Di Lorenzo & Galassi, 2013 Mann-Withney U-tests, p=0.043; p=0.049 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Ecological changes under disturbance: the effects of groundwater availability of the aquifers After Kløve et al., 2013 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 The effect of organic pollution on stygobiotic fauna: the replacement by stygoxenes After Malard et al., 2001 Natural disasters: the earthquakes Crustal stress O2 increase Aquifer strain Aquifer discharge increase Fracturing Earthquake Ground shaking POM increase BIOTRIGGER Very fine sand increase Fracture cleaning Montgomery & Manga, Science, 2003 Galassi et al., Sci. Rep., 2014 Hydrological changes in groundwater trigger alteration of groundwater copepod assemblages 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 The cascade effect: from the earthquake to the biotrigger Galassi et al., 2014 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014 Integrative index of groundwater ecosystem status Toward the assessment of integrative indexes scoring the ecological status of the GDEs: groundwater copepods as «model species»? GW quality scoring GW quantity scoring Testing species sensitivity (ecotoxicology, genotoxicity, proteomics) scoring MODEL SPECIES FOR GDEs? Testing Community/assemblage composition under different drivers and pressures scoring Many thanks to all my friends, colleagues, collaborators who made possible this review. Many thanks to the Local Commitee and to Wonchoel Lee and Rony Huys for the attention paid to GW and copepods living there Many thanks to: 12th ICOC Seoul, 2014