“…These theoretical studies also stimulated work on applied aspects of trait responses to human-caused stressors (or release from stress after restoration) of organisms such as benthic stream invertebrates Dolédec et al, 1999), stream fish (Ferreira et al, 2007;Schmutz et al, 2007), benthic pond or lake invertebrates (Menetrey et al, 2005;Van Kleef et al, 2006), waterway hydrophytes (Willby, Pygott & Eaton, 2001), lagoon fish, benthic invertebrates, macrophytes and plankton (Mouillot et al, 2006;Pravoni, Da Ponte & Torricelli, 2008), marine benthic invertebrates (Bremner, Frid & Rogers, 2003a;Frid et al, 2008), marine fish (Jennings, Greenstreet & Reynolds, 1999), fluvial floodplain plants, molluscs and insects (Dziock, 2006;Foeckler et al, 2006;Henle et al, 2006) or forest birds (Hausner, Yoccoz & Ims, 2003). These recent assessments of the potential of multiple biological traits to indicate human-caused stressors across a diverse range of organismic groups and ecosystem types indicate perhaps the beginning of a new era in biomonitoring (see also Baird, Rubach & Van den Brink, 2008), the era of using multiple Biological Traits as Indicators (BTIs) of human-caused stressors across ecosystem types.…”