Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Small Water Bodies in Great Britain and Ireland: Ecosystem function, human-generated degradation, and options for restorative action

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dc.creator Riley, William D.
dc.creator Potter, Edward C. E.
dc.creator Biggs, Jeremy
dc.creator Collins, Adrian L.
dc.creator Jarvie, Helen P.
dc.creator Jones, J. Iwan
dc.creator Kelly-Quinn, Mary
dc.creator Ormerod, Steve J.
dc.creator Sear, David A.
dc.creator Wilby, Robert L.
dc.creator Broadmeadow, Samantha
dc.creator Brown, Colin D.
dc.creator Chanin, Paul
dc.creator Copp, Gordon H.
dc.creator Cowx, Ian G.
dc.creator Grogan, Adam
dc.creator Hornby, Duncan D.
dc.creator Huggett, Duncan
dc.creator Kelly, Martyn G.
dc.creator Naura, Marc
dc.creator Newman, Jonathan R.
dc.creator Siriwardena, Gavin M.
dc.date 2018-09-10T14:29:18Z
dc.date 2018-09-10T14:29:18Z
dc.date 2018-07-26
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-25T16:38:23Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-25T16:38:23Z
dc.identifier William D. Riley, Edward C.E. Potter, Jeremy Biggs., et al. Small Water Bodies in Great Britain and Ireland: Ecosystem function, human-generated degradation, and options for restorative action. Volume 645, 15 December 2018, Pages 1598-1616
dc.identifier 0048-9697
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.243
dc.identifier http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/13469
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/182326
dc.description Small, 1st and 2nd-order, headwater streams and ponds play essential roles in providing natural flood control, trapping sediments and contaminants, retaining nutrients, and maintaining biological diversity, which extend into downstream reaches, lakes and estuaries. However, the large geographic extent and high connectivity of these small water bodies with the surrounding terrestrial ecosystem makes them particularly vulnerable to growing land-use pressures and environmental change. The greatest pressure on the physical processes in these waters has been their extension and modification for agricultural and forestry drainage, resulting in highly modified discharge and temperature regimes that have implications for flood and drought control further downstream. The extensive length of the small stream network exposes rivers to a wide range of inputs, including nutrients, pesticides, heavy metals, sediment and emerging contaminants. Small water bodies have also been affected by invasions of non-native species, which along with the physical and chemical pressures, have affected most groups of organisms with consequent implications for the wider biodiversity within the catchment. Reducing the impacts and restoring the natural ecosystem function of these water bodies requires a three-tiered approach based on: restoration of channel hydromorphological dynamics; restoration and management of the riparian zone; and management of activities in the wider catchment that have both point-source and diffuse impacts. Such activities are expensive and so emphasis must be placed on integrated programmes that provide multiple benefits. Practical options need to be promoted through legislative regulation, financial incentives, markets for resource services and voluntary codes and actions.
dc.language en
dc.publisher Elsevier
dc.rights Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0
dc.rights http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
dc.subject Streams
dc.subject Ponds
dc.subject Headwaters
dc.subject Anthropogenic pressures
dc.subject Remediation
dc.subject Ecosystem services
dc.title Small Water Bodies in Great Britain and Ireland: Ecosystem function, human-generated degradation, and options for restorative action
dc.type Article


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