Title: Degradation of Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems
1Degradation of Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems
2A first step in understanding how to restore or
repair damaged ecosystems is to understand how
Wildland Degradation occurs (forests,
grasslands, savannahs, deserts, shrublands,
wetlands, marshlands)
3Stages
- Initially -- altered species composition (some
species are being selected out) - Ecosystem still has control over essential
resources (soil, water, nutrients and organic
materials)
http//www.wwf.it/summit/images/19061_germany20Ac
id20rain.jpg
4- Degradation becomes more severe as the area loses
control over its essential resources - What does this mean?
Russia
http//www.iiasa.ac.at/collections/IIASA_Research/
Research/FOR/russia_cd/pictures/final_pics/degrada
tion/05_deg_des1.jpg
5- Eventually the ecosystem loses capability for
self-repair. - System unravels leads to such factors as
desertification - Degradation continues in the absence of the
original causal factor!
Tajikistan
http//enrin.grida.no/htmls/tadjik/soe2001/eng/htm
ls/erosion/press.htm
6- In other words removing a stress or disturbance
often does not result in recovery. - Irreversible changes have occurred to the
ecosytem. - Thresholds of irreversibility have been
crossed.
http//www.osce.org/photo_gal/web_311_282925_11089
83500.jpg
Van Andel and Aronson 2005
7Degradation Model
8Water Capture Efficiency
High
Low
Energy Capture Efficiency
High
Low
Nutrient Retention Efficiency
Low
High
Resource Flows Captured by Organic Materials
High
Low
9Relative Value of Landform Features in Resource
Capture
High
Low
Relative Value of Microtopographic Features in
Resource Capture
Low
High
10Favorability of Microclimate to Promote Primary
Processes
Low
High
11How about Riparian and Aquatic Ecosystems??
- That is how are they different, how are they
similar to what has just been described?
12Connectivity
- Guess what?
- Water runs downhill.
- Streams and rivers are NETWORKS.
- If you change the ecological conditions at a
site, you potentially affect the entire network .
. . - Both downstream AND upstream.
13(No Transcript)
14Oak Creek
15Depth of Channel Incision
16Stream Network
- So where do you start to reverse the degradation
caused by incision or gullying?
17Ash Swale
18Gully Where Ash Swale Was Removed
19Lower End of Gully at Oak Creek
2053rd Street Road Crossing
2153rd Street Road Crossing
22Dairy Reach of Oak Creek
23Mouth of Oak Creek
24Mouth of Oak Creek
25Willamette River
26Begin to Conceptualize Cause and Effect and
Relationship to Degradation
- How do we evaluate where we are in the
degradation process - What steps need to be taken to repair the
ecosystem
27Stepwise Degradation of Terrestrial Wildland
Landscapes (adapted from Whisenant 1999Table 1.1)
- Baseline Reference Ecosystem
- Biomass and composition of vegetation varies with
climatic cycles and stochastic events. - Perennial vegetation changes are associated with
varying climatic conditions (precipitation or
temperature) rather than with consumption of
primary production. Primary processes are
undamaged. - Management options
- Adaptive management of herbivory, wood
harvesting, hay or fodder removal. - Appropriate focus for initial repair activities
is on Secondary producers (consumers of the
ecosystems primary production)
28What is a Reference Ecosystem?
- Planning and evaluation
- a point of advanced development along intended
trajectory. - The restored ecosystem is eventually expected to
emulate its attributes. - Consists of one or several locations, a written
description, or a combination of both. - Information includes both biotic and abiotic
components.
Adapted from Society for Ecological Restoration
The SER International Primer on Ecological
Restoration. Section 4.
29Terrestrial Degradation Step 1
- Selective removal of keystone species reduces
recruitment, allowing expansion of populations of
less preferred species. - Age distribution of plant populations changes to
older plants. Primary processes are undamaged. - Management Options
- Stricter control of selective consumption of
plants. - Focus restoration on causal factors affecting
keystones ecosystems processes.
30Terrestrial Degradation Step 2
- Plant species are lost, as are their specialized
predators and symbiots. -
- Reduced secondary productivity (dependent plants
and animals). Primary processes are damaged, but
functioning. - Manage vegetation (e.g., add, remove, or modify)
with planting, fire, herbicides, biological,
cultural or other methods. - Focus on primary producers for repair activities
31Terrestrial Degradation Step 3
- Biomass and productivity of vegetation fluctuates
as ephemerals benefit from loss of perennial
cover - Perennial biomass reduced (short-lived plants and
instability increase), resident birds decrease,
and nomads increase. Primary processes are only
partially functional. - Management
- Manipulate soil cover (e.g., mulching, erosion
barriers, roughen soil surface). - Use carefully selected vegetation to modify micro
environmental conditions - Focus for initial repair activities Physical
environment
32Degradation Step 4
- Denudation and desertification involve changes in
soil function and detritivore activity. - Bare ground, erosion, and aridification. Primary
processes are nonfunctional. - Management
- Manipulate soil cover (e.g., mulching, erosion
barriers, roughen soil surface). - Use woody vegetation to modify microenvironmental
conditions. - Focus for initial repair activities Physical
environment (moderate microclimate). - Recognize chances of recovery are slim!
33Assess Risk
34Cookbooks Are Not Substitutes for Understanding
Ecological Processes
35Ecologically Unsound Restoration Practices Are
No Joke
36Halting Degradation of Terrestrial and Aquatic
Ecosystems Requires You to be a Student of the
Ecosystem.
- Learn about your ecosystems.
- Degradation occurs in response to different and
often interacting perturbations. - Changes in a disturbances
- Changes in climate
- Introduction of new species
- Intentional actions by humans
37Challenge determine where one is at in the
degradation process and act accordingly!!
- The farther the degradation, the more it will
cost to repair it! - Complete restoration possibilities diminish.
- Recognize and plan for ecological, sociologic and
economic realities!