Abstract

Quantifying the effects of human activity on the natural environment is dependent on credible estimates of reference conditions to define the state of the environment before the onset of adverse human impacts. In Europe, emission controls that aimed at restoring ecological status were based on hindcasts from process-based models or paleolimnological reconstructions. For instance, 1860 is used in Europe as the target for restoration from acidification concerning biological and chemical parameters. A more practical problem is that the historical states of ecosystems and their function cannot be observed directly. Therefore, we (i) compare estimates of acidification based on long-term observations of roach (Rutilus rutilus) populations with hindcast pH from the hydrogeochemical model MAGIC; (ii) discuss policy implications and possible scope for use of long-term archival data for assessing human impacts on the natural environment and (iii) present a novel conceptual model for interpreting the importance of physico-chemical and ecological deviations from reference conditions. Of the 85 lakes studied, 78 were coherently classified by both methods. In 1980, 28 lakes were classified as acidified with the MAGIC model, however, roach was present in 14 of these. In 2010, MAGIC predicted chemical recovery in 50% of the lakes, however roach only recolonized in five lakes after 1990, showing a lag between chemical and biological recovery. Our study is the first study of its kind to use long-term archival biological data in concert with hydrogeochemical modeling for regional assessments of anthropogenic acidification. Based on our results, we show how the conceptual model can be used to understand and prioritize management of physico-chemical and ecological effects of anthropogenic stressors on surface water quality.

Highlights

  • Defining targets for restoration of impacted ecosystems in a changing world is challenging

  • We (i) compare estimates of acidification based on long-term observations of roach (Rutilus rutilus) populations with hindcast pH time series from the Model of Acidification of Groundwater in Catchments (MAGIC) model; (ii) discuss policy implications and possible scope for use of long-term archival data for assessing human impacts on the natural environment; and (iii) present a novel conceptual model for interpreting the importance of physico-chemical and ecological deviations from reference conditions

  • The straightforward comparison of hydrogeochemical modeling and presence/absence of fish provided a greater understanding of a century of anthropogenic pressure and provided an alternative reference condition in boreal lakes

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Summary

Introduction

Defining targets for restoration of impacted ecosystems in a changing world is challenging. Humans have impacted their supporting ecosystems throughout history, making any definition of undisturbed reference states ambiguous. Environmental legislation including the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD; 2000/60/EC) and US Clean Water Act are based on the assumption that undisturbed reference conditions can be identified. The pragmatic solution to this dilemma has been to specify a point in time during which human impacts were considerably lower than today. 1860 is widely used in Europe as the point in time when undisturbed reference conditions existed. While the impacts of fossil fuel burning on surface water

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