Arid
DOI10.1002/eco.1560
Novel water sources restore plant and animal communities along an urban river
Bateman, H. L.1,3; Stromberg, J. C.2; Banville, M. J.3; Makings, E.2; Scott, B. D.2; Suchy, A.2; Wolkis, D.2
通讯作者Bateman, H. L.
会议名称Restoring Functional Riparian Ecosystems - Concepts and Applications Symposium at the 5th World Conference on Ecological Restoration
会议日期2013
会议地点Madison, WI
英文摘要

Many projects have been undertaken to restore urban rivers in arid regions. At the same time, passive discharge of urban water sources has stimulated redevelopment of wetlands and riparian forests along stretches of dewatered rivers. In Phoenix, Arizona, for example, some segments of the dewatered Salt River have been actively restored by planting and irrigation, whereas others have revegetated in response to runoff from storm drains and effluent drains. Our research documents how biotic communities differ between these actively restored and accidentally' restored areas, and between wetter and drier urban reaches. We addressed these objectives with a multi-taxa, multi-season sampling approach along reaches of the Salt River. We quantified plants using cover estimates in quadrats, birds using fixed radius, point-count surveys, and herpetofauna (amphibians and reptiles) using visual-encounter surveys. One notable finding was that wetland plants had greater richness and cover at accidentally restored sites compared with actively restored, dry urban, and non-urban reference sites. Birds and herpetofauna, however, were most species-rich at actively restored and non-urban reference sites, and riparian birds were more abundant at sites with perennial flows compared with ephemeral reaches. From a landscape perspective, the range of management approaches along the river (including laissez-faire) is sustaining a diverse riparian and wetland mosaic. Urban water subsidies are sustaining freshwater forests and marshlands, the latter a regionally declining ecosystem. In urbanized rivers of arid regions, mapping and conserving perennial stream flows arising from stormwater and effluent discharge can be an important complement to active restoration. Copyright (c) 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


英文关键词aridland streams birds desert accidental restoration riparian vegetation urban ecology wetlands wildlife
来源出版物ECOHYDROLOGY
ISSN1936-0584
EISSN1936-0592
出版年2015
卷号8
期号5
页码792-811
出版者WILEY
类型Article;Proceedings Paper
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E ; CPCI-S
WOS记录号WOS:000358538800006
WOS关键词SALT RIVER ; BIODIVERSITY ; FOREST ; STREAM ; URBANIZATION ; CONSERVATION ; ECOSYSTEMS ; MANAGEMENT ; VEGETATION ; DIVERSITY
WOS类目Ecology ; Environmental Sciences ; Water Resources
WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Water Resources
资源类型会议论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/304662
作者单位1.Arizona State Univ, Sch Letters & Sci, Mesa, AZ 85212 USA;
2.Arizona State Univ, Sch Life Sci, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA;
3.Arizona State Univ, Cent Arizona Phoenix Long Term Ecol Res, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
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Bateman, H. L.,Stromberg, J. C.,Banville, M. J.,et al. Novel water sources restore plant and animal communities along an urban river[C]:WILEY,2015:792-811.
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