1 / 24

Barriers to Aquatic Organisms

Barriers to Aquatic Organisms. By: Aaron Rice, Michael Tchen , and Leo Bertolino. Problem Statement. Barriers to aquatic organisms have a detrimental effect on organism’s natural habitat range and fitness. Goal/Purpose.

kineks
Télécharger la présentation

Barriers to Aquatic Organisms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Barriers to Aquatic Organisms By: Aaron Rice, Michael Tchen, and Leo Bertolino

  2. Problem Statement Barriers to aquatic organisms have a detrimental effect on organism’s natural habitat range and fitness.

  3. Goal/Purpose To establish a relative risk model for barriers to aquatic organisms including associated sources and habitats

  4. Objectives • Establish connections rankings between sources and sub-stressors. • Establish significance rankings between sources and sub-stressors. • Establish connections rankings between sub-stressors and habitats. • Establish significance rankings between sub-stressors and habitats.

  5. Sub-stressors • Terrestrial barriers • ex. roads • Aquatic barriers • ex. dams • Physical environmental changes as a barrier • ex. sedimentation

  6. Aquatic Barriers • A barrier to movements of aquatic organisms that is found in the water.

  7. Sources of Aquatic Barriers • Dams (2) • Migratory fish • Roads – Culverts (2) • Upstream travel • Marinas? (0) • Possible link - unsure

  8. Effects of Aquatic Barriers on Habitats • Lake Champlain <6ft (1) • Fish specie loss • Lakes/Ponds (1) • Connected to rivers • Wetlands (1) • Connected to bodies of water • Forests (indirect?) (.5) • Bottom up effect? • Streams/Rivers (2) • Dams and culverts

  9. Terrestrial Barriers • Land based barriers to aquatic organisms.

  10. Sources of Terrestrial Barriers • Agriculture (.5) • Fragmentation of landscape • Urban (2) • Inhospitable passage • Roads (2) • Car traffic • Industrial (1) • Impassible

  11. Effects of Terrestrial Barriers on Habitats • Lakes/Ponds (2) • Streams/Rivers (2) • Forests (1) • Herps add less to total biodiversity • Wetlands (2) • Effect due to loss of herpetofauna • Frogs, turtles, salamanders, etc.

  12. Physical Environmental Changes as a Barrier • Changes to the hydrology and physical characteristics of water bodies causing a barrier to aquatic organism movement.

  13. Sources of Physical Environmental Changes as a Barrier • Agriculture (1) • Urban (2) • Roads – culverts (1) • Increase stream flow • Waste water treatment plants (1) • Dams (2) • Industrial (1) • Increased water temperature • External (1) • Climate change ? • Increased runoff causing sedimentation and increase stream flow

  14. Effects of Physical Environmental Changes as a Barrier on Habitats • Lake Champlain <6ft (1) • Decreased stream accessibility • Lake Champlain >6ft (.5) • Loss of fish • Lakes/ponds (1) • Loss of habitat and in turn species • Rivers/streams (2) • Loss of spawning habitat • Less upstream colonization • Wetlands (1) • sedimentation

  15. Source – Sub-stressor Linkage Matrix

  16. Source – Sub-stressor Significance Matrix

  17. Sub-stressor – Habitat Linkage Matrix

  18. Sub-stressor – Habitat Significance Matrix

  19. Total Ranking System • Weighted average • Multiply the linkage matrix by the significance matrix. • Terrestrial and Aquatic Barriers weight 2x physical environmental barriers. • The weighted totals on the significance matrices are pre- linkage adjustment.

  20. Recommendations for Dams • Provide large economic benefits • Fish ladders around larger dams (questionable effectiveness) • Careful removal of old dams • One large dam will prevent all upstream travel

  21. Recommendations for Culverts • Identify Causeways using GIS • Modify road culverts- sediment substrate, allow light • Add temporary drift fence to culvert • Establish 289m core habitat and 50m buffer zone (Semlitsch and Bodie 2003)

  22. Recommendations for Culverts cont. • Culverts- site by site • No long culverts-more chance to not passs through and cuts off bends • Undersized culverts-hourglass syndrome • Take into consideration Vertical adjustment range (VAR)

  23. Physical Environmental Changes • Plant buffer crops along rivers and streams • Increase culvert sizes to reduce flow speed • Better management of waste water • Reduce impassible dams which impede water flow • Decrease urban impervious surface • Permeable pavement • Natural sinks for storm water drainage

  24. Questions?

More Related