163 research outputs found

    Riverine Ecosystem Management: Science for Governing Towards a Sustainable Future

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    This open access book surveys the frontier of scientific river research and provides examples to guide management towards a sustainable future of riverine ecosystems. Principal structures and functions of the biogeosphere of rivers are explained; key threats are identified, and effective solutions for restoration and mitigation are provided. Rivers are among the most threatened ecosystems of the world. They increasingly suffer from pollution, water abstraction, river channelisation and damming. Fundamental knowledge of ecosystem structure and function is necessary to understand how human acitivities interfere with natural processes and which interventions are feasible to rectify this. Modern water legislation strives for sustainable water resource management and protection of important habitats and species. However, decision makers would benefit from more profound understanding of ecosystem degradation processes and of innovative methodologies and tools for efficient mitigation and restoration. The book provides best-practice examples of sustainable river management from on-site studies, European-wide analyses and case studies from other parts of the world. This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of aquatic ecology, river system functioning, conservation and restoration, to postgraduate students, to institutions involved in water management, and to water related industries

    „Gewässersanierung ein gemeinsamer Weg“ Ein Workshop des Österreichischen Wasser- und Abfallwirtschaftsverbandes (ÖWAV)

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    Am 15. September 2016 fand der ÖWAV-Workshop „Gewässersanierung ein gemeinsamer Weg“ statt. Der Workshop wurde vom Arbeitsausschuss „EU-Wasserrahmenrichtlinie“ der Fachgruppe „Wasserbau, Ingenieurbiologie und Ökologie“ des ÖWAV initiiert und gemeinsam mit weiteren VertreterInnen unterschiedlichster Sektoren organisiert. Mehr als 50 Personen, die verschiedenste Fachbereiche auf nationaler, regionaler und lokaler Ebene repräsentieren, kamen der Einladung zu dieser Veranstaltung, die in Österreich erstmalig in diesem Format stattfand. Ziel der Veranstaltung war es, einen gemeinsamen Weg in der Sanierung der österreichischen Fließgewässer zu skizzieren. In einem ersten Schritt wurde hinterfragt, ob es angesichts der sehr unterschiedlichen Interessen der Nutzung bzw. des Schutzes unserer Gewässer überhaupt eine gemeinsame Vision einer zukünftigen Flusslandschaft geben kann. Im Anschluss daran wurde versucht, Hindernisse in der Umsetzung dieser Vision zu identifizieren und Lösungsansätze zu erarbeiten. In kleinen Gruppen wurden anhand eines fiktiven, grafisch aufbereiteten Einzugsgebietes mit unterschiedlichsten Belastungen konkrete Problemfelder diskutiert und nach gemeinsamen Lösungswegen gesucht. Als erster Schritt wurden aus sektoraler Sicht Lösungen zur Reduktion der Belastungen entwickelt, um die gewässerökologische Situation zu verbessern. Ein anschließender Rollentausch diente dem besseren gegenseitigen Verständnis der unterschiedlichen sektoralen Interessen, um schließlich gemeinsam in der Gruppe einen gesamtheitlichen, integrativen Lösungsweg zu erarbeiten. Die wesentlichsten Ergebnisse des Workshops werden hier zusammengefasst.(VLID)214304

    Manipulating Rydberg atoms close to surfaces at cryogenic temperatures

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    Helium atoms in Rydberg states have been manipulated coherently with microwave radiation pulses near a gold surface and near a superconducting NbTiN surface at a temperature of 3K3 \text{K}. The experiments were carried out with a skimmed supersonic beam of metastable (1s)1(2s)11S0(1\text{s})^1(2\text{s})^1\, {}^1\text{S}_0 helium atoms excited with laser radiation to npn\text{p} Rydberg levels with principal quantum number nn between 3030 and 4040. The separation between the cold surface and the center of the collimated beam is adjustable down to 250μm250 \mu\text{m}. Short-lived npn\text{p} Rydberg levels were coherently transferred to the long-lived nsn\text{s} state to avoid radiative decay of the Rydberg atoms between the photoexcitation region and the region above the cold surfaces. Further coherent manipulation of the nsn\text{s} Rydberg levels with pulsed microwave radiation above the surfaces enabled measurements of stray electric fields and allowed us to study the decoherence of the atomic ensemble. Adsorption of residual gas onto the surfaces and the resulting slow build-up of stray fields was minimized by controlling the temperature of the surface and monitoring the partial pressures of H2_2O, N2_2, O2_2 and CO2_2 in the experimental chamber during the cool-down. Compensation of the stray electric fields to levels below 100mV/cm100 \text{mV}/\text{cm} was achieved over a region of 6mm6 \text{mm} along the beam-propagation direction which, for the 1770m/s1770 \text{m}/\text{s} beam velocity, implies the possibility to preserve the coherence of the atomic sample for several microseconds above the cold surfaces.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure

    Mental models for web objects: Where do users expect to find the most frequent objects in online shops, news portals, and company web pages?

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    In interface development, it is crucial to reflect the users' expectations and mental models. By meeting users' expectations, errors can be prevented and the efficiency of the interaction can be enhanced. Applying these guidelines to website development reveals the need to know where users expect to find the most common web objects like the search field, home button or the navigation. In a preliminary online study with 136 participants, the most common web objects were identified for three web page types: online shops, news portals, and company web pages. These objects were used for the main study, which was conducted with 516 participants. In an online application, prototypical websites had to be constructed by the participants. Data analysis showed that Internet users have distinct mental models for different web page types (online shop, news portal, and company web page). Users generally agree about the locations of many, but not all, web objects. These mental models are robust to demographic factors like gender and web expertise. This knowledge could be used to improve the perception and usability of website

    Life stage-specific hydropeaking flow rules

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    ReviewPeak-operating hydropower plants are usually the energy grid’s backbone by providing flexible energy production. At the same time, hydropeaking operations are considered one of the most adverse impacts on rivers, whereby aquatic organisms and their life-history stages can be affected in many ways. Therefore, we propose specific seasonal regulations to protect ecologically sensitive life cycle stages. By reviewing hydropeaking literature, we establish a framework for hydrological mitigation based on life-history stages of salmonid fish and their relationship with key parameters of the hydrograph. During migration and spawning, flows should be kept relatively stable, and a flow cap should be implemented to prevent the dewatering of spawning grounds during intragravel life stages. While eggs may be comparably tolerant to dewatering, post-hatch stages are very vulnerable, which calls for minimizing or eliminating the duration of drawdown situations and providing adequate minimum flows. Especially emerging fry are extremely sensitive to flow fluctuations. As fish then grow in size, they become less vulnerable. Therefore, an ‘emergence window’, where stringent thresholds on ramping rates are enforced, is proposed. Furthermore, time of day, morphology, and temperature changes must be considered as they may interact with hydropeaking. We conclude that the presented mitigation framework can aid the environmental enhancement of hydropeaking rivers while maintaining flexible energy productioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Cross-continental evaluation of landscape-scale drivers and their impacts to fluvial fishes: Understanding frequency and severity to improve fish conservation in Europe and the United States

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    Fluvial fishes are threatened globally from intensive human landscape stressors degrading aquatic ecosystems. However, impacts vary regionally, as stressors and natural environmental factors differ between ecoregions and continents. To date, a comparison of fish responses to landscape stressors over continents is lacking, limiting understanding of consistency of impacts and hampering efficiencies in conserving fishes over large regions. This study addresses these shortcomings through a novel, integrative assessment of fluvial fishes throughout Europe and the conterminous United States. Using large-scale datasets, including information on fish assemblages from more than 30,000 locations on both continents, we identified threshold responses of fishes summarized by functional traits to landscape stressors including agriculture, pasture, urban area, road crossings, and human population density. After summarizing stressors by catchment unit (local and network) and constraining analyses by stream size (creeks vs. rivers), we analyzed stressor frequency (number of significant thresholds) and stressor severity (value of identified thresholds) within ecoregions across Europe and the United States. We document hundreds of responses of fish metrics to multi-scale stressors in ecoregions across two continents, providing rich findings to aid in understanding and comparing threats to fishes across the study regions. Collectively, we found that lithophilic species and, as expected, intolerant species are most sensitive to stressors in both continents, while migratory and rheophilic species are similarly strongly affected in the United States. Also, urban land use and human population density were most frequently associated with declines in fish assemblages, underscoring the pervasiveness of these stressors in both continents. This study offers an unprecedented comparison of landscape stressor effects on fluvial fishes in a consistent and comparable manner, supporting conservation of freshwater habitats in both continents and worldwide

    Drawing together multiple lines of evidence from assessment studies of hydropeaking pressures in impacted rivers

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    Hydropeaking has negative effects on aquatic biota, but the causal relationships have not been studied extensively, especially when hydropeaking occurs in combination with other environmental pressures. The available evidence comes mainly from case studies demonstrating river-specific effects of hydropeaking that result in modified microhabitat conditions and lead to declines in fish populations. We used multiple lines of evidence to attempt to strengthen the evidence base for models of ecological response to flow alteration from hydropeaking. First, we synthesized evidence of ecological responses from relevant studies published in the scientific literature. We found considerable evidence of the ecological effects of hydropeaking, but many causal pathways are poorly understood, and we found very little research on the interactive effects of hydropeaking and other pressures. As a 2nd line of evidence, we used results from analyses of large-scale data sets. These results demonstrated the extent to which hydropeaking occurs with other pressures, but did not elucidate individual or interactive effects further. Thus, the multiple lines of evidence complemented each other, but the main result was to identify knowledge gaps regarding hydropeaking and a consequent pressing need for novel approaches, new questions, and new ways of thinking that can fill them.© 2017 by The Society for Freshwater Science.publishedVersio

    Does soundpeaking affect the behavior of chub (Squalius cephalus) and brown trout (Salmo trutta)? : an experimental approach

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    Increased turbulent flow and sediment transport during flood or hydropeaking events often induces rapid changes in underwater sound pressure levels, which is here referred to as soundpeaking. This study is the first to investigate such a change in the underwater soundscape in relation to fish behavior using an experimental approach. Trials were conducted in an experimental channel stocked with either adult chub (Squalius cephalus) or brown trout (Salmo trutta). To mimic soundpeaking, the underwater soundscape of a small alpine river was recorded during a flood event and later played back through an underwater speaker during treatment trials. Furthermore, trials were recorded with a video camera, and based on the fish position, movement variables (swimming distance, number of movement direction changes, variance of the acceleration), the aggregation of individuals, the longitudinal and the lateral position in the experimental area were compared between control (no sound played) and treatment trials. During treatment trials, brown trout changed their movement direction significantly more often, chub showed a significantly higher variation of the acceleration, and individuals from both species were significantly more aggregated. Furthermore, the soundpeaking treatment had a significant effect on the longitudinal position of brown trout in the experimental area. However, the overall results did not provide any indication for a stronger soundpeaking effect in chub despite being equipped with much more refined hearing abilities in comparison to brown trout. Based on these results and findings from other studies, soundpeaking is discussed as a behavioral trigger as well as a source of acoustic stress
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