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To truly understand the health of a lake, you must look well beyond its shoreline
On the surface, most of Canada's lakes and rivers look pristine. But below the surface, many are facing essential challenges to their health. Why? To better understand the health of Canadian lakes and rivers, we must look beyond the site itself to the whole watershed.
Canada's freshwater streams, rivers and lakes are inherently connected ecosystems. Driven by precipitation and gravity, the flow of water changes across seasons and location. Connected waterflows form watersheds. A watershed is the combined area drained by a body of water, including groundwater aquifers.
All human activity within a watershed that affects the quality of flowing water—including rain, snow, irrigation or groundwater—will have an impact upon all the water bodies in the system. Because of this, it is essential to monitor and regulate human activities in a lake's watershed if its health and biodiversity are to be preserved.
In my research, I work to better understand lake, stream and river ecosystem functioning, biodiversity and health. This is of increasing importance as aquatic environments are affected by climate change. What is clear, is that to fully understand what is going on in a lake ecosystem, you need to look beyond its shoreline.
Truly understanding how water flows within a watershed can empower us to act more responsibly and design more just and effective policies.
Moreover, humans have long been manipulating water flows through dams and irrigation. Where we place our cities, agriculture, mines and forestry also often overlaps with more than one watershed or can overwhelm another.
Recent work, as part of the Lake Pulse Network, has sampled over 650 lakes across Canada. This research demonstrated that only a four percent to 12 percent urbanization level within a watershed is enough to harm biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.
Urbanization is one of the most impactful ways in which humans affect watersheds. The reasons for this are likely down to hard infrastructure blocking the flow of water along with forestry and agriculture land conversions changing how water flows.
The inescapable truth is that the health and function of a specific aquatic ecosystem is shaped by what happens on the land within that watershed as a whole. These system-wide influences are known as as "allochthonous"—as opposed to "autochthonous" (internal) interactions solely within a single waterbody.
External influences (runoff) from the land can overwhelm a water body's internal processes and, in some case, can even have negative impacts upon both fish health and the wider local food web.
Climate change is also playing an increasingly outsized role in the lives of Canadian lakes. The most noticeable impacts of a warming world in Canada are forest fires of increasing severity and duration and ever more intense storms.
The connectivity between waterbodies within a watershed is also critical to consider in biodiversity conservation.
First, these aquatic connections serve as migratory corridors for mammals and birds, but also aquatic species of fish and invertebrates like insects and crayfish. With climate change and warming waters across Canada, aquatic organisms will increasingly need such corridors within watersheds to move northwards to cooler waters.
Just as migratory pathways enable the dispersal of native species, they can also aid the spread of invasive species. Invasive species management must also take a watershed perspective, and not focus on a single invaded lake or river.
If an exotic species has arrived in your watershed then you are likely to soon see that species in a lake or river near you.
Contaminants—such as pesticides, other toxins, microplastics and nutrients—also require a watershed-wide approach to effectively manage. Like an invasive species, contaminants can flow downstream across a watershed. Though, the presence of healthy wetlands within a watershed can help filter these out and improve water quality.
Dams, bridges and culverts provide a clear physical barrier to connectivity within a watershed. Though not without utility, these human constructs greatly affect the watershed ecosystem.
Unfortunately, the challenges facing fish populations can have significant impacts for biodiversity health, and ecosystem services, across the watershed.
Endlessly interconnected
The interconnected nature of watershed ecosystems necessitates collaborative forms of governance.
Integrated watershed management is an approach to water governance that involves many different agencies, communities and levels of government. Several provinces use this approach, including the most populated provinces of Ontario and Québec. This model must become the norm across Canada.
Enabling watershed governance across political boundaries is an area where the new federal Canada Water Agency could play a leading role.
Regardless of specific arrangement, it is imperative that all who care about the health of Canada's freshwater consider its lakes and rivers within their larger watersheds. Only by focusing on watershed health can we preserve Canada's freshwater.
Citation:
To truly understand the health of a lake, you must look well beyond its shoreline (2024, October 22)
retrieved 22 October 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-10-health-lake-shoreline.html
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