Abstract

In cave ecosystems tourists represent moving sources of discontinuous disturbances, able to induce transient system responses whose knowledge is crucial in defining appropriate conservation measures. Here we propose an approach to evaluate the amplitude and scales of cave alterations based on high-resolution air monitoring, through the use of purposely developed low-cost monitoring stations and a consistent analytical framework for information retrieval based on time series analysis. In particular, monitoring stations adopt a modular structure based on physical computing platforms acquiring data through several sensors, with means of preventing humidity damages and guaranteeing their continuous operation. Data are then analyzed using wavelet periodograms and cross-periodograms to extract the scales of tourism-induced alterations. The approach has been exemplified in the Pertosa-Auletta Cave, one of the most important underground environments in Southern Italy, highlighting the development of monitoring stations and the information obtainable with the proposed analytical workflow. Here, 2 monitoring stations acquiring data for 1 year at 1′ sampling time on temperature, relative humidity, CO2, VOCs, and particulate matter were deployed in trails subjected to different levels of tourism. In terms of Pertosa-Auletta Cave air dynamics, the approach allowed estimating the temporal and spatial scales of tourism-induced alterations in the order of minutes and meters, respectively, with parameter-dependent variations. On more general terms, the approach proved reliable and effective, with its modularity and low-cost fostering its straightforward adoption in other underground ecosystems, where it can support the development of tailored management strategies.

Highlights

  • Caves are one of the most fragile ecosystems on Earth (White 2019)

  • Temperature, relative humidity, and CO2 are the only ones showing largescale temporal dynamics, all the others appearing stationary over the year of monitoring, with variations mostly occurring at small scales

  • They enhance our understanding of the cave ecosystem by shedding light on its dynamics at multiple spatial and temporal scales, on the coupling between the internal and external dynamics, and on the possible drivers of several processes

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Summary

Introduction

Caves are one of the most fragile ecosystems on Earth (White 2019). Being confined places, characterized by little spatial and temporal variability of several ecological factors, every anthropogenic disturbance can trigger alterations taking longer to settle, and possibly never returning to the initial states (Lobo et al 2013).

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