Research

Publications
Title: A Simple Index of Lake Ecosystem Health Based on Species-Area Models of Macrobenthos
First author: Wu, Junyan; He, Yajing; Zhao, Yongjing; Chen, Kai; Cui, Yongde; Wang, Hongzhu
Journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Years: 2022
Volume / issue: /
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19159678
Abstract: An effective biological index should meet two criteria: (1) the selected parameters have clear relationships with ecosystem health and can be measured simply by standard methods and (2) reference conditions can be defined objectively and simply. Species richness is a widely used estimate of ecosystem condition, although it is increased by nutrient enrichment, a common disturbance. Based on macrobenthos data from 91 shallow Yangtze lakes disconnected from the mainstem, we constructed an observed species (S-O)-area (A) model to predict expected species richness (S-E), and then developed an observed to expected index (O/E-(SA)) by calculating the S-O/S-E ratio. We then compared O/E-(SA) with three other commonly used indices regarding their ability to discriminate cultivated and urban lakes: (1) River Invertebrate Prediction and Classification System (RIVPACS; O/E-(RF)), (2) Benthic Index of Biotic Integrity (B-IBI), and (3) Average Score Per Taxon (ASPT). O/E-(SA) showed significant positive linear relationships with O/E-(RF), B-IBI and ASPT. Quantile regressions showed that O/E-(SA) and O/E-(RF) had hump-shape relationships with most eutrophication metrics, whereas B-IBI and ASPT had no obvious relationships. Only O/E-(SA), O/E-50 and B-IBI significantly discriminated cultivated from urban lakes. O/E-(SA) had comparable or higher performance with O/E-(RF), B-IBI and ASPT, but was much simpler. Therefore, O/E-(SA) is a simple and reliable index for lake ecosystem health bioassessment. Finally, a framework was proposed for integrated biological assessment of Yangtze-disconnected lakes.