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首页> 外文期刊>Australian Journal of Botany >Rivers as groundwater-dependent ecosystems: a review of degrees of dependency, riverine processes and management implications.
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Rivers as groundwater-dependent ecosystems: a review of degrees of dependency, riverine processes and management implications.

机译:河流是依赖地下水的生态系统:对依赖程度,河流进程及其管理意义的回顾。

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摘要

Many rivers are classified as groundwater-dependent ecosystems (GDEs), owing to the contribution of groundwater to their base flow. However, there has been little explicit recognition of the way groundwater influences riverine biota or processes, how degrees of ecological dependency may vary, and the management implications of this dependency. The permeable beds and banks of these GDEs where surface water and groundwater exchange are termed hyporheic zones. They are often inhabited by invertebrates, with varying reliance on groundwater, although the ecological roles of these invertebrates are little known. Upwelling hyporheic water can promote surface primary productivity, influence sediment microbial activity, and affect organic matter decomposition. In many intermittent streams, variable groundwater inputs alter the duration of flow or water permanence, and the duration and timing of these largely govern the biota and rates of many ecosystem processes (e.g. leaf decomposition). Not only is the physical presence of water important, thermal and chemical conditions arising from groundwater inputs also have direct and indirect effects on riverine biota and rates or types of in-stream processes. Differing degrees of dependency of rivers on groundwater mediate all these influences, and may change over time and in response to human activities. Alteration of groundwater inputs through extraction from riparian wells or changes in local water table have an impact on these GDEs, and some current management plans aim to restrict groundwater extraction from near permeable river channels. However, these are often 'blanket' restrictions and the mechanisms of GDE dependency or timing of groundwater requirements are poorly understood, hampering refinement of this management approach. More effective management of these GDEs into the future can result only from a better understanding of the mechanisms of the dependency, how these vary among river types and what in-stream changes might be predicted from alteration of groundwater inputs..
机译:由于河流对基流的贡献,许多河流被归类为依赖地下水的生态系统(GDE)。然而,人们几乎没有明确认识到地下水影响河流生物区系或过程的方式,生态依赖性程度如何变化以及这种依赖性的管理意义。这些GDE的可渗透床和堤岸,其中地表水和地下水的交换被称为低渗带。尽管这些无脊椎动物的生态作用鲜为人知,但它们通常居住在无脊椎动物中,对地下水的依赖程度各不相同。上升流的高纯水可以提高地表的基本生产力,影响沉积物的微生物活性,并影响有机物的分解。在许多间歇流中,可变的地下水输入会改变流量或水的持续时间,而持续时间和时间在很大程度上决定着生物群系和许多生态系统过程(例如叶片分解)的速率。不仅水的物理存在很重要,而且由于地下水输入而产生的热力和化学条件也直接和间接地影响河流的生物区系以及河流过程的速率或类型。河流对地下水的依赖程度不同,会介导所有这些影响,并且可能随着时间的推移以及对人类活动的响应而发生变化。通过从河岸井抽水或改变当地地下水位来改变地下水输入量,都会对这些GDE产生影响,一些现行的管理计划旨在限制从可渗透河道附近抽取地下水。但是,这些通常是“空白”限制,人们对GDE依赖性或地下水需求时间的机制了解甚少,这妨碍了这种管理方法的完善。未来对这些GDE进行更有效的管理,只能通过对依赖性机制,河流类型之间的差异以及从地下水输入量的变化中可以预测到哪些河流变化方面的更好理解来实现。

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