Abstract

With the accelerated development of urbanization, rivers in urban areas have become the most closely synergized water ecosystem between human activities and natural processes. To achieve the restoration goal of using hydrological regime change-ecological response relationship to advance the sustainable development of regulated river ecosystems, this study collected ecohydrological data at four tributaries of the Wei River system (Ba, Chan, Feng, and Hei Rivers) at a total of 24 stations in October 2020 and June 2021. Taking ecological flow as hydrological parameter and zooplankton as indicator organism, combined with habitat data scored on-site, the indicator system of zooplankton index of biological integrity and comprehensive habitat quality index was established to explore the hydrological-ecological response relationship in a multi-dimensional way. The results showed that during the ebb stage, the ecological health of the Feng River was better overall, with an average ecological flow value of 267.09 ± 348.62. The ecological health of the Hei River was the worst, with an average ecological flow value of 37.80 ± 38.80. During the abundant water period, the ecological health of the Chan River was optimal with an average ecological flow value of 189.25 ± 190.10, while the ecological health of the Hei River remained unimproved, but the average ecological flow value increased by 283.12 ± 197.76. There was a clear negative correlation relationship between the comprehensive habitat quality index and ecological flow. The correlation between zooplankton index of biological integrity and ecological flows is extremely strong and threshold values exist, but there is strong heterogeneity in the interaction of disturbance factors across water systems, which may not provide a predictable response to flow changes. This study aims to provide a case reference for flow management in watersheds that also lack long-time series hydrological data and to contribute new thinking to the wide application of the hydrological-ecological response relationship.

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