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  1. Article ; Online: Ponds, puddles, floodplains and dams in the Upper Xingu Basin

    Luis Schiesari / Paulo R. Ilha / Daniel Din Betin Negri / Paulo Inácio Prado / Britta Grillitsch

    Perspectives in Ecology and Conservation, Vol 18, Iss 2, Pp 61-

    could we be witnessing the ‘lentification’ of deforested Amazonia?

    2020  Volume 72

    Abstract: Hydrological change is a conspicuous signal of land use intensification in human-dominated landscapes. We hypothesized that land conversion and land use change increase the availability of lentic habitats and associated biodiversity in Southern Amazonian ...

    Abstract Hydrological change is a conspicuous signal of land use intensification in human-dominated landscapes. We hypothesized that land conversion and land use change increase the availability of lentic habitats and associated biodiversity in Southern Amazonian landscapes through at least four drivers. River damming promotes the formation of reservoirs, which are novel permanent lentic water bodies. A rise in the water table driven by local deforestation promotes the expansion of shallow riparian floodplains. Soil compaction and the deliberate construction of cattle and drainage ponds promote the increase in temporary water bodies in interfluves. We tested these hypotheses using data on habitat characterization and biological surveys of amphibians and fish in forests, pastures and soybean fields in the headwaters of the Xingu River in Mato Grosso, Brazil. Lentic habitat availability sharply increased in deforested land, with consequences to freshwater biodiversity. Reservoir formation influenced both fish and amphibian assemblage structure. Fish species ranged from strongly favored to strongly disfavored by reservoir conditions. Amphibian richness and abundance increased in pasture and soybean streams relative to forests in proportion to the density of reservoirs in the landscape. Expansion of stream floodplains increased the abundance of Melanorivulus megaroni, a fish species indicator of shallow lentic habitats. Rainwater accumulation in temporary ponds and puddles, absent from well-drained forested interfluves, allowed the invasion of converted interfluves by twelve species of open-area amphibians. A literature review indicates that these four drivers of hydrological change are geographically widespread suggesting that we may be witnessing a major yet previously unaccounted form of habitat change in deforested Amazonia, affecting both biodiversity and human health.
    Keywords Land use change ; Land cover change ; Freshwater ; Amazon ; Dams ; Deforestation ; Ecology ; QH540-549.5 ; General. Including nature conservation ; geographical distribution ; QH1-199.5
    Subject code 333
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-04-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Elsevier
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article: Pesticides meet megadiversity in the expansion of biofuel crops

    Schiesari, Luis / Britta Grillitsch

    Frontiers in ecology and the environment. 2011 May, v. 9, no. 4

    2011  

    Abstract: Global interest in biofuels is driving a continuous expansion of agroindustrial production in tropical countries, bringing a substantial share of the world's biodiversity into contact with hundreds of potentially hazardous pesticides. We reviewed the ... ...

    Abstract Global interest in biofuels is driving a continuous expansion of agroindustrial production in tropical countries, bringing a substantial share of the world's biodiversity into contact with hundreds of potentially hazardous pesticides. We reviewed the hazards imposed by all 784 pesticides currently registered for use on biofuel crops in Brazil. We detected compounds that have been suspended by international conventions, as well as over 80 compounds included in lists of priority concern for exhibiting environmental persistence and/or having the potential to elicit neurotoxic, reprotoxic, carcinogenic, or endocrine‐disrupting effects in humans and wildlife. These chemicals will be used at increased rates, or for the first time, across large expanses of agroin‐dustrially converted pastures and native (ie pristine) habitat in the cerrado (tropical savanna) and Amazonian rainforest biomes. If human and environmental health are to be balanced with productivity to achieve a sustainable agriculture, bolder initiatives on pesticide restriction and control must be implemented in tropical countries.
    Keywords biodiversity ; biofuels ; cerrado ; ecosystems ; energy crops ; environmental health ; habitats ; humans ; neurotoxicity ; pastures ; pesticides ; rain forests ; savannas ; sustainable agriculture ; wildlife ; Brazil
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2011-05
    Size p. 215-221.
    Publishing place Ecological Society of America
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2110853-5
    ISSN 1540-9309 ; 1540-9295
    ISSN (online) 1540-9309
    ISSN 1540-9295
    DOI 10.1890/090139
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  3. Article: Ableitung von Umweltqualitätsnormen für die chemische Qualität von Oberflächengewässern und Grundwasser

    Bursch, Wilfried / Manfred Clara / Britta Grillitsch

    Österreichische Wasser- und Abfallwirtschaft. 2013 June, v. 65, no. 5-6

    2013  

    Abstract: Environmental Quality Standards (EQS) for the chemical quality of surface water and groundwater define the concentration of a particular pollutant or group of pollutants in water, sediment or aquatic biota that should not be exceeded in order to protect ... ...

    Title translation Derivation of environmental quality standards for the chemical quality of surface waters and groundwater
    Abstract Environmental Quality Standards (EQS) for the chemical quality of surface water and groundwater define the concentration of a particular pollutant or group of pollutants in water, sediment or aquatic biota that should not be exceeded in order to protect human health and the environment. Thus, EQS represent a class of environmental quality criteria important for meeting the requirements of the Environmental Quality Objectives defined in the national Austrian Water Management Plan. The list of the main pollutants as well as procedures for deriving the corresponding EQS values are defined in the legal regulatory framework at the community level (Water Framework Directive, Groundwater Directive, and Environmental Quality Standards Directive) and national level (Water Quality Objectives Acts). The aim of this article is to provide an overview of the integration of EQS as chemical quality elements within the framework of evaluating the status of surface water and groundwater as determined by its ecological status and its chemical status. Furthermore, an outline of the derivation of EQS based on physicochemical, human toxicity and ecotoxicity parameters is provided with particular consideration of metals, Endocrine Disrupters, quality assurance, and alternative methods.
    Keywords ecotoxicology ; endocrine-disrupting chemicals ; groundwater ; metals ; pollutants ; quality control ; sediments ; surface water ; toxicity ; water management ; water quality ; Austria
    Language German
    Dates of publication 2013-06
    Size p. 170-177.
    Publishing place Springer-Verlag
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1186984-7
    ISSN 1613-7566 ; 0945-358X
    ISSN (online) 1613-7566
    ISSN 0945-358X
    DOI 10.1007/s00506-013-0074-6
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  4. Article: Pesticides meet megadiversity in the expansion of biofuel crops

    Schiesari, Luis / Britta Grillitsch

    Frontiers in ecology and the environment

    Volume v. 9,, Issue no. 4

    Abstract: Global interest in biofuels is driving a continuous expansion of agroindustrial production in tropical countries, bringing a substantial share of the world's biodiversity into contact with hundreds of potentially hazardous pesticides. We reviewed the ... ...

    Abstract Global interest in biofuels is driving a continuous expansion of agroindustrial production in tropical countries, bringing a substantial share of the world's biodiversity into contact with hundreds of potentially hazardous pesticides. We reviewed the hazards imposed by all 784 pesticides currently registered for use on biofuel crops in Brazil. We detected compounds that have been suspended by international conventions, as well as over 80 compounds included in lists of priority concern for exhibiting environmental persistence and/or having the potential to elicit neurotoxic, reprotoxic, carcinogenic, or endocrine‐disrupting effects in humans and wildlife. These chemicals will be used at increased rates, or for the first time, across large expanses of agroin‐dustrially converted pastures and native (ie pristine) habitat in the cerrado (tropical savanna) and Amazonian rainforest biomes. If human and environmental health are to be balanced with productivity to achieve a sustainable agriculture, bolder initiatives on pesticide restriction and control must be implemented in tropical countries.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 1540-9295
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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