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Multiple stressor effects on biological quality elements in the Ebro River: Present diagnosis and predicted responses

The Science of The Total Environment 2018 29 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Albert Herrero, Sergi Sabater Rohini Kumar, Cayetano Gutiérrez‐Cánovas, Rohini Kumar, Rohini Kumar, Rohini Kumar, Rohini Kumar, Rohini Kumar, Sergi Sabater Olga Vigiak, Stefanie Lutz, Sergi Sabater Sergi Sabater Rohini Kumar, David Gampe, Verena Huber-García, Verena Huber-García, Ralf Ludwig, Ramón J. Batalla, Sergi Sabater Sergi Sabater Sergi Sabater

Summary

Researchers analyzed how multiple environmental stressors — including excess nutrients, temperature, and river flow changes — affect the ecological health of waterways in Spain's Ebro River basin, finding that phosphorus levels had the strongest impact on biological communities. Modeling future climate and land use scenarios, the study predicts a general decline in river ecosystem quality, particularly in nutrient-sensitive species like diatoms and invertebrates.

Multiple abiotic stressors affect the ecological status of water bodies. The status of waterbodies in the Ebro catchment (NE Spain) is evaluated using the biological quality elements (BQEs) of diatoms, invertebrates and macrophytes. The multi-stressor influence on the three BQEs was evaluated using the monitoring dataset available from the catchment water authority. Nutrient concentrations, especially total phosphorus (TP), affected most of the analyzed BQEs, while changes in mean discharge, water temperature, or river morphology did not show significant influences. Linear statistical models were used to evaluate the change of water bodies' ecological status under different combinations of future socioeconomic and climate scenarios. Changes in land use, rainfall, water temperature, mean discharge, TP and nitrate concentrations were modeled according to the future scenarios. These revealed an evolution of the abiotic stressors that could lead to a general decrease in the ecosystem quality of water bodies within the Ebro catchment. This deterioration was especially evidenced on the diatoms and invertebrate biological indices, mainly because of the foreseen increase in TP concentrations. Water bodies located in the headwaters were seen as the most sensitive to future changes.

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