Urbanisation process generates more independently-acting stressors and ecosystem functioning impairment in tropical Andean streams

J Environ Manage. 2022 Feb 15:304:114211. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.114211. Epub 2021 Dec 1.

Abstract

The tropical Andes are experiencing rapid population growth and urbanisation has become a major driver impairing stream ecosystems. However, knowledge about multiple-stressors effects on urbanised Andean streams is lacking. In southern Ecuador, we assessed how multiple stressors determine the structural (aquatic invertebrate metrics) and functional (organic matter breakdown and delta N of primary consumers) attributes of streams in a densely populated watershed without wastewater treatment and with contrasting land uses. We found that urbanised streams exhibited individual-stressor effects and that stressor interactions were rare. While structural and function attributes responded negatively to urbanisation, ecosystem functioning metrics were influenced most. Stream ecosystem functions were influenced by water-chemistry stressors, whereas aquatic invertebrate metrics were influenced by physical-habitat stressors. We suggest that managers of urbanised streams in the Andes immediately focus on the most important stressors by reducing inputs of inorganic N and P, re-establishing stream flow and substrate heterogeneity, and restoring riparian vegetation instead of attempting to elucidate intricate interactions among stressors. Our result also demonstrate that stream biomonitoring programs would benefit from a combination of structural and functional indicators to assess anthropogenic effects in a multiple-stressors scenario.

Keywords: Anthropogenic stressors; Aquatic invertebrates; Decomposition; Land use; Nutrients processing.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Anthropogenic Effects
  • Ecosystem*
  • Invertebrates
  • Rivers*
  • Urbanization