Non-perennial rivers and streams (NPRS) cover N 50% of the global river network. They are particularly predominant in Mediterranean Europe as a result of dry climate conditions, climate change and land use development. Historically, both scientists and policy makers underestimated the importance of NRPS for nature and humans alike, mainly because they have been considered as systems of low ecological and economic value. During the past decades, diminishing water resources have increased the spatial and temporal extent of artificial NPRS as well as their exposure to multiple stressors, which threatening their ecological integrity, biodiversity and ecosystem services. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive overview of the structural and functional characteristics of NPRS in the European Mediterranean, and discuss gaps and problems in their management, concerning their typology, ecological assessment, legislative and policy protection, and incorporation in River Basin Management Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Science of the Total Environment j o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w . e l s e v i e r . c o m / l o c a t e / s c i t o t e n vPlans. Because NPRS comprise highly unstable ecosystems, with strong and often unpredictable temporal and spatial variability -at least as far as it is possible to assess -we outline the future research needs required to better understand, manage and conserve them as highly valuable and sensitive ecosystems. Efficient collaborative activities among multidisciplinary research groups aiming to create innovative knowledge, water managers and policy makers are urgently needed in order to establish an appropriate methodological and legislative background. The incorporation of NPRS in EU-Med River Basin Management Plans in combination with the application of ecological flows is a first step towards enhancing NPRS management and conservation in order to effectively safeguard these highly valuable albeit threatened ecosystems.
Perennial rivers and streams make a disproportionate contribution to global carbon (C)cycling. However, the contribution of intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams, which
Intermittent rivers and ephemeral streams (IRES) are common across Europe and dominate some Mediterranean river networks. In all climate zones, IRES support high biodiversity and provide ecosystem services. As dynamic ecosystems that transition between flowing, pool, and dry states, IRES are typically poorly represented in biomonitoring programmes implemented to characterize EU Water Framework Directive ecological status. We report the results of a survey completed by representatives from 20 European countries to identify current challenges to IRES status assessment, examples of best practice, and priorities for future research. We identify five major barriers to effective ecological status classification in IRES: 1. the exclusion of IRES from Water Framework Directive biomonitoring based on their small catchment size; 2. the lack of river typologies that distinguish between contrasting IRES; 3. difficulties in defining the 'reference conditions' that represent unimpacted dynamic ecosystems; 4. classification of IRES ecological status based on lotic communities sampled using methods developed for perennial rivers; and 5. a reliance on taxonomic characterization of local communities. Despite these challenges, we recognize examples of innovative practice that can inform modification of current biomonitoring activity to promote effective IRES status classification. Priorities for future research include reconceptualization of the reference condition approach to accommodate spatiotemporal fluctuations in community composition, and modification of indices of ecosystem health to recognize both taxon-specific sensitivities to intermittence and dispersal abilities, within a landscape context.
We analysed the spatial patterns in macroinvertebrate taxon richness and abundance at two scales: sampling unit and basin. We sampled 12 stream sites in three zones of Portugal, differing in climate geomorphology and water chemistry. At a sampling unit scale, substratum organic matter content, depth and the dominant size of substratum particles were correlated with numbers of taxa and individuals. We propose that the number of taxa at a small scale depends on the number of individuals, which in turn is the result of organic matter accumulation, hydrologic and substratum characteristics. The environmental parameters better explaining the large-scale biological data were temperature, minimum size of substratum particles and pH. Regardless of the relative importance of variable types and mechanisms regulating stream invertebrates along the climatic gradient, rivers from the North and Centre appeared to be richer in taxa than the typically Mediterranean streams in the South. IntroductionOne important attribute of communities is their species richness and diversity. Various mechanisms have been indicated as controlling species diversity, including productivity, habitat heterogeneity and biotic interactions (TOWNSEND, 1989;TOWNSEND et al., 2002). Rivers and their adjacent riparian zones are considered to be dynamic, complex and diverse systems (RISSER, 1990;NAIMAN et al., 1993). Benthic macroinvertebrates are an important component of the river biota. At a large scale, diversity of invertebrates along and among rivers is affected by factors such as longitudinal zonation of river abiotic conditions (VANNOTE et al., 1980;CLENAGHAN et al., 1998), channel width and catchment size (MALMQVIST and HOFFSTEN, 2000), discharge (CORTES et al., 2002), temperature and pH (TOWNSEND et al., 1983;CLARKE and SCRUTON, 1997).At a stream reach scale, invertebrates have, in general, a clumped distribution, which is assumed to be related to the mosaic of interchanging conditions in substratum, flow conditions, depth and many others (TOWNSEND, 1989;CORTES et al., 2002). These conditions are likely to change at a scale of only a few metres or centimetres. At this small scale, factors indicated as regulating macroinvertebrate distribution and richness are current velocity, substratum particle size (MARCHANT et al., 1985;WILLIAMS and MOORE, 1986;ARUNACHALAM et al., 1991), substratum stability (MALMQVIST and OTTO, 1987), organic matter in the Internat. Rev. Hydrobiol.
The generalization of ecological results from temporary streams needs the study of those ecosystems across a broad scale of running waters, covering the geographical ecological constraints involved (e.g., precipitation, temperature and geology). For the particular situation of Mediterranean streams in Southern Europe, high changes in water level, with unpredicting flood events, represent an important factor determining the structure and function of Mediterranean streams. This variability, inducing accentuated changes in the macroinvertebrate community, tends to influence the assessment methodologies. A set of metrics commonly used in Europe to assess organic degradation (Shannon-Wiener index, evenness, richness, BBI, IBE, BMWP , ASPT , DSFI, EPT, number of Trichoptera families, percentage of Gasteropoda, Oligochaeta and Diptera) and a multimetric index (IM9) developed to assess organic degradation in southern siliceous Portuguese basins were tested to evaluate quality at two contrasting sites (one unimpaired and another impaired by an identified point source of pollution). The multimetric index (IM9) composed by: ASPT (average score per taxon); GOLD (one minus percentage of Gasteropoda, Oligochaeta and Diptera); and TRICF (number of Trichoptera families), was the most suitable assessment methodology. IM9 presented a quite stable temporal pattern from February in late winter until June in early summer, even under the effect of episodic floods. A stepwise regression showed that most of tested metrics were significantly related to environmental variables (soluble reactive phosphorous, dissolved inorganic nitrogen and dissolved oxygen). Only richness, IBE and BMWP were not significantly influenced by environmental variables. Future research must be done covering the complete gradient of organic degradation, including the extension of multimetric assessment methodologies to temporary streams located in other regions under different geological and climatic conditions.
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