Strategize a Smooth Tenant-to-tenant Migration and Copilot Takeoff
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C leigh river health indicators and assessment nov2010
1. River health indicators and
assessment
Dr Catherine Leigh
Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, Australia
2. This afternoonâs presentation outline
⢠First session (Cath Leigh):
â Indicators and benchmarking for
scoring and assessing river health
⢠Second session (Nick Bond):
â Things to think about
⢠Quality assurance
⢠Site selection
⢠Pressure indicators
⢠Classification
⢠Refinement and adaptation
River Health Indicators and Assessment
3. First Session: Outline
⢠The process of developing a river health monitoring and
assessment program
⢠Some commonly used indicators
⢠Benefits and limitations of different indicators
⢠What does an indicator value actually mean in terms of river
health?
â How do you standardise and compare indicators among sites and
through time (how do you score river health)?
â Does the score make sense?
⢠Different ways to combine scores for reporting
River Health Indicators and Assessment
4. Flow chart of the process
Conceptual
models Land-use
Assess indicator assessment to
Identify suite of Field trial sensitivity to define
potential indicators disturbance disturbance
gradient gradient
Consider for yes No
Did the indicator Review
inclusion in respond as expected? indicator
scorecard
Do standards already exist No Can thresholds and
(Chinese or international) targets be established
from the data? No
yes
yes
Consider for
River Adopt appropriate Include in future
Classification standard scorecard programs
Steps in developing a river health program
5. What are âindicators of river healthâ?
⢠River âhealthâ can be assessed using indicators
of a riverâs ecological condition in terms of its
physical, chemical and biological attributes
⢠These indicators must be efficient, rapid and
founded on ecology, and must also
â be responsive to environmental changes
â be comparative over different ecological
regions, and
â report on the whole ecosystem condition
⢠No shortage of potential indicators
River Health Indicators
6. Different kinds of indicatorsâŚ
⢠Pressure Indicators (indicators of
human disturbance)
â Measures of hydrological alteration
â Indicators of channel modification
â Land-use change indicators
â Measures of nutrient and sediment inputs
â Indicators of exotic and/or invasive speciesâ
introductions
⢠Ecosystem Response Indicators
â Indicators of an ecosystem response to
environmental change
River Health Indicators
7. Types of ecosystem response indicators
we typically use.....
⢠Water quality indicators
â Dissolved oxygen, conductivity, pH, turbidity, nutrients, anions and
cations, heavy metals
⢠Biological pattern indicators
â Fish Assemblage Composition
⢠Various indicators using richness, abundance, presence/absence of
species
â Macroinvertebrate Assemblage Composition
⢠Various indicators (e.g. richness) and predictive models (e.g. AusRivAs
observed versus expected)
⢠Process and biological function indicators
â Primary production, benthic metabolism and nutrient cycling,
decomposition, fish body condition, food webs
River Health Indicators
8. Why monitor beyond water quality?
⢠There are other forms of human disturbance to rivers
that we want to detect besides pollution
⢠Water quality is highly variable through time, biological
indicators tend to be less so
⢠There are more pollutants than it is possible to
measure
⢠Pollutants interact and cause synergistic effects that
may be unknown
⢠Biological indicators integrate through time
and across multiple stressors
River Health Indicators
9. Biological indicators show structural and
functional responses
⢠Biotic communities and populations show structural changes in
response to disturbance
⢠Change in diversity (usually decreases)
⢠Change in abundance (sometimes increases)
⢠Loss of certain groups (loss of diversity and/or abundance)
â E.g. sensitive macroinvertebrate taxa like Trichoptera (caddisflies),
Ephemeroptera (mayflies) and Plecoptera (stoneflies) = EPT taxa
⢠They also have functional and process responses to disturbance
⢠Change in condition (e.g. fish body weight to length ratio usually
decreases)
⢠Change in food webs (e.g. fish predator to prey ratios usually decreases)
⢠Change in recruitment / reproduction (e.g. number of young fish in the total
fish population usually decreases)
River Health Indicators
10. Invertebrates as response indicators
Why use invertebrates?
â Ubiquitous (found almost everywhere)
⢠occur in most habitats across a diverse range of aquatic systems
â Many species and families
⢠have a broad range of responses to disturbance
â Sedentary
⢠effective spatial analyses of pollutants or disturbance effects
â Relative longevity
⢠They can be used to assess changes through time
River Health Indicators
11. Invertebrates as response indicators
⢠Some limitations
â typically used for small or wadeable streams (edge and riffle
habitats) rather than large, un-wadeable rivers
â taxonomy may be poorly developed for some regions (hard
to identify all species)
â taxonomic identification and sample processing can be
intensive and take a long time depending on the level of
identification required
â multiple samples or compositing of samples from one site
may be required to reduce variation between samples /
sample the river community thoroughly
River Health Indicators
12. Fish as response indicators
⢠Why use fish?
â Life history information often available
â Feed at many different levels of the food web
â Biological integrity can be assessed rapidly (using metrics)
â Both acute toxicity & stress effects can be assessed
â Affected by large-scale factors
â Commonly used to assess large, non-wadeable rivers
â Often long-lived â integrate temporal changes
â Have social and cultural value
River Health Indicators
13. Fish as response indicators
⢠Some limitations
â Some species may be sparsely distributed, others may school
(this creates patchy distributions)
â They may travel between impacted and non-impacted areas
â Little may be known about juvenile stages making it harder to
assess recruitment
â More difficult to sample in a systematic way
â Fish catch can be affected by effort
â Different sampling methods may catch different types of fish
River Health Indicators
14. Some other things to consider about
indicatorsâŚ
⢠The programâs objectives; the conceptual understanding of the
river system; the key human disturbances; the identified important
ecological, social and economic assets
⢠How responsive the indicators are to the disturbances?
⢠How likely the indicators are to reflect a response to river health
management (reduction in disturbance)?
⢠Indicator redundancy
â How unique is each indicator (what important information does it tell us about
the riverâs ecological integrity)?
⢠What level of training is required to collect, maintain and analyse
data for the indicators?
River Health Indicators
15. Flow chart of the process
Conceptual
models Land-use
Assess indicator assessment to
Identify suite of Field trial sensitivity to define
potential indicators disturbance disturbance
gradient gradient
Consider for yes No
Did the indicator Review
inclusion in respond as expected? indicator
scorecard
Do standards already exist No Can thresholds and
(Chinese or international) targets be established
from the data? No
yes
yes
Consider for
River Adopt appropriate Include in future
Classification standard scorecard programs
Scoring and assessing river health
16. An example: Macroinvertebrate EPT richness
⢠In the Taizi River Pilot Study, one indicator we tested was EPT
richness
â Family level identification of macroinvertebrate taxa from each site
â Number of different families within Ephemeroptera (E), Plecoptera (P)
and Trichoptera (T) was calculated
â EPT family richness (EPT_S)
⢠EPT_S had significant statistical relationships with the disturbance
gradient (showed the expected response)
Scoring and assessing river health
17. An example: Macroinvertebrate EPT richness
⢠Values for EPT_S in the Taizi study area were higher in the
Mountainous region than in the Lowland region
⢠But what do these values mean in terms of river health and how do we
compare between sites?
⢠How do we standardize the values so we can score EPT_S and
compare among sites?
⢠We need to know what values represent a âhealthyâ river and what
values do not
Scoring and assessing river health
18. Reference or benchmark for indicators
What is âhealthyâ and what is not?
X ďź
Scoring and assessing river health
19. Benchmarking selected indicators, scoring
and assessing river health
⢠To report on (score and assess) river health, values can be set for
each of the selected indicators that reflect different levels of health
(this is called âbenchmarkingâ)
⢠It is important, therefore, to agree on levels that distinguish
between âgoodâ (target or reference) and âbadâ (unacceptable)
condition in a particular river based on:
â River type (Classification)
â River health programâs objectives
â Management objectives for that river
⢠Different reporting programs often use different benchmarking
and/or scoring systems
Scoring and assessing river health
20. Benchmarking selected indicators, scoring
and assessing river health
⢠A reference point or benchmark for indicators sets a value that we
expect at a site in a state of âgoodâ health
â Logical reference point is the expected condition of a site if undisturbed by
human activity
â In practice though, such sites will not exist in all river regions
⢠How can we make sensible conclusions about results of the monitoring?
â Reference Condition Approach
â Synthetic Reference Condition Approach
â Disturbance Gradient Approach
â Expert opinion and local knowledge
â Refinement and adaptation
Scoring and assessing river health
21. Reference Condition
⢠The âreference conditionâ approach relies on comparing test
sites with others in âreference conditionâ
⢠These may be in a natural âun-impactedâ condition or have
habitats in âbest attainableâ natural condition
Scoring and assessing river health
22. Synthetic Reference Condition
⢠Synthetic âconditionâ is generated through conceptual models,
expert opinion and long-term datasets
⢠The Synthetic Reference Condition can theoretically be set at
any âpointâ that is seen to be desirable (in terms of âgood
ecological conditionâ)
Scoring and assessing river health
23. Disturbance Gradient
⢠The disturbance gradient approach is used South-East Queensland
in Australia
⢠Indicators are tested against an appropriate disturbance gradient (e.g.
land use)
â Those indicators best able to detect changes
Ecological health indicator
in ecological condition are then included in
monitoring programs
â Indicator values under low human
disturbance may be predicted from the
Reference values
modelled relationships
Low High
Disturbance gradient
Scoring and assessing river health
24. So there are many different options for
benchmarkingâŚ
⢠Indicator values from reference sites (if available)
⢠Historical or modelled data (before to a particular disturbance)
⢠Data from similar systems elsewhere in good condition (this is an
example where the classification step in developing a river health
program is important)
⢠Comparison with values derived from indicator-disturbance
relationship models
⢠Established criteria or standards (often applied to water quality)
⢠Expert opinion and local knowledge
The option chosen must be the most appropriate for the particular
river health program and the river system in question
Scoring and assessing river health
25. Setting a decision framework
⢠It may be important to establish a decision framework by which to
determine potential target values (âgoodâ health) and values that
represent âbadâ or âunacceptableâ health for each of the chosen
indicators. (These are the values that can be used to âscoreâ the
health of each site)
⢠The framework provides the rationale as to how and why the
values were chosen for each indicator â e.g. why an established
guideline was used for one indicator, but a reference condition
value was used for another
⢠Expert opinion, local knowledge, and an understanding of the
programâs objectives must also be kept in mind when applying
such a decision framework and when checking to see if the results
âmake senseâ
Scoring and assessing river health
26. An example: Macroinvertebrate EPT richness
⢠Looking again at our example of EPT_S valuesâŚ
⢠No true reference sites in the study region; but there are some well researched
guideline values from different parts of the world with similar types of rivers
⢠We can compare these with the EPT_S values in the Taizi and use expert
knowledge to guide our choice of suitable target and threshold values
⢠We also consider the river classification (so we compare like with like); do we
expect different EPT richness in different regions of the Taizi?
⢠We also consider the programâs objectives â to improve biotic diversity and
decrease impacts of human disturbance on biota
⢠So⌠we used a combination of expert opinion, published values in the literature and
unpublished data from undisturbed streams and âreference conditionâ rivers in China
and other parts of the world with similar environmental characteristics (climate,
topography etc)
⢠We then compared these values with our own data to establish sensible EPT_S values
that represented âtargetâ (excellent health) and âworst-case scenarioâ (the âfailâ value,
extremely bad health) for each reporting region (Uplands, Midlands, Lowlands)
Scoring and assessing river health
27. Next step: Score and assess river health
⢠Different methods can be used to score river health
⢠E.g. the Australian EHMP and USA EPA health programs use a
standardised scoring system that gives each site a score between
0 and 1 for each indicator:
⢠If indicators increase in value with disturbance:
Score = 1 â ((Observed site value â Target value)/ (Fail value â Target value))
⢠If indicators decrease in value with disturbance:
Score = 1 â ((Target value â Observed site value)/ (Target value â Fail value))
Scoring and assessing river health
28. An example: Macroinvertebrate EPT richness
⢠EPT_S decreases in value with disturbance
⢠e.g. for each site:
Score = 1 â (Target value â Observed EPT_S value)
(Target value â Worst-case Scenario value)
⢠This produces scores for each site that have meaning in terms of the
sitesâ level of ecological condition
⢠These scores can be compared with each other (in space) and through
time
Scoring and assessing river health
29. Scoring and assessing river health
⢠Scores for indicators within indicator groups can be aggregated in
many different ways
⢠This might be done by taking the average score for the indicators,
or the minimum score etc.
â The minimum score might be appropriate if a poor score from any of
the individual indicators was particularly detrimental to overall
ecosystem health
⢠Scores can also be aggregated across sites to provide an overall
score for each of the river regions.
â For example, this could be done by averaging each of the indicator
group scores across sites within each river region, or by taking the
minimum score etc
Scoring and assessing river health
30. Aggregating scores: a Queensland example
Seasonal site index measurement 127 sites monitored twice per
(raw data) year (Spring and Autumn)
14 Indices x 127 sites x 2 seasons
Index measurement compared to target
and worst-case scenario values =
Standardised Score (0-1)
Seasonal site index score (0-1)
14 Indices x 127 sites x 2 seasons Fish
Standardised scores Invertebrates
for indices in each of
5 Indicator Groups Nutrients
averaged Physico-chemical
(0-1)
Seasonal site indicator group score (0-1) Ecosystem processes
5 Indicator Groups x 127 sites x 2
seasons
Scoring and assessing river health
31. Different levels of health between 0 and 1
⢠If desired, different levels of health (e.g. of low or high concern)
could be set for each indicator score (somewhere between 0 and1)
⢠Also, what score between 0 and 1 is the cut-off between passing or
failing river health?
⢠This cut-off value may depend on the ecosystem health objectives
and/or management actions applicable to the site, river section or
reporting region
⢠For example, a score of 0.2 or more may be considered
acceptable for a site in a designated industrial zone where little or
no ecosystem health management is expected, but a score less
than 0.7 might be considered a fail for a site in a nature reserve
⢠These scoring options and their implications for ecosystem health,
management and reporting must be considered carefully and in
light of the programâs overall objectives and by the whole team
Scoring and assessing river health
32. Thank you!
Many thanks to CRAES, Zhang Yuan, Qu Xiaodong,
Kong Weijing, and Nick Bond