CS2 - Acidification and recovery of surface waters
Submitting Institution
Queen Mary, University of LondonUnit of Assessment
Biological SciencesSummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Environmental Sciences: Ecological Applications, Environmental Science and Management
Biological Sciences: Ecology
Summary of the impact
Prof Alan Hildrew and his group have carried out research that supports
and informs the UK Acid Water Monitoring Network, which was established by
Defra to provide information about the effects of changes in emissions
policy on freshwater ecosystems in the UK. The hypothesis-driven research
on invertebrates and fish explains patterns of ecological recovery in
freshwaters following reduced emissions and freshwater acidification.
Hildrew's group revealed that biological communities have failed to fully
recover following reductions in atmospheric SO2. These data and
insights have: 1) supported organisations tasked with the management of UK
freshwaters to meet commitments under the EU Water Framework Directive, 2)
informed a range of national and international ecological surveillance
programmes, and 3) influenced policy makers, being key to the argument
that was made to tighten emissions legislation across the EU in 2012. This
work has far-reaching impacts in assessing and amending EU legislation
and, ultimately, in reducing air pollution and improving environmental
quality.
Underpinning research
Professor Hildrew has led the research into ecological responses to
reductions in acidification (particularly food web processes and
productivity) from QMUL for the last 35 years (funded continuously via
Defra and others). Additional notable QMUL contributors are Mark Ledger
(NERC PhD student, 1993-97: research on grazing in acidified systems), Guy
Woodward (NERC PhD student, 1995-99, then Senior Lecturer at QMUL, now
(from 2013) Reader at Imperial College; research on foodwebs), Katrin
Layer (PhD student, 2001-05; research on acid stream food webs), Gareth
Jenkins (NERC PhD student, 2010 to date; research on food web recovery)
and John Murphy (QMUL River Communities group, Dorset since 2009).
Hildrew's group has used a novel indicator of acidification, initially
developed by Murphy, to interpret changes in freshwater macroinvertebrates
over 20 years of data a. From 1993 to date, QMUL research has
been aimed at understanding the recovery process in freshwater ecosystems
and particularly in accounting for the sluggish response of the biota to
marked improvements in water chemistry. Hildrew and colleagues
hypothesised that the loss of species via toxicity has had ramifying
consequences through the food web, via indirect interactions producing
unexpected non-linearities in ecological recovery and a muted biological
response hitherto b, c, d (i.e. recovery to a non-acidified
ecological status has been less than anticipated). They have shown that
chemical recovery of the water has unexpectedly resulted in invasions by
progressively larger top predators and longer food chains (but not
substantial reestablishment of the acid-sensitive fauna lower in the food
web), possibly as a result of increases in basal productivity due to more
rapid decomposition of organic matter e. Further, the
assemblage of acid-tolerant generalists, having taken over the `grazing
niche', seems able to resist the recolonisation of acid sensitive
specialist grazers and thus inhibits the anticipated return of such
species d. The group have also studied the terrestrial
dispersal of adult aquatic insects to test, and subsequently reject the
hypothesis that dispersal limitations have delayed recovery of chemically
improving streams f. Their sustained research is crucial to
understanding the dynamics of ecosystems in the face of environmental
change over time periods (decades) of ecological significance and
management interest.
References to the research
a Murphy, J.F., Winterbottom, J.H., Orton, S., Simpson, G.L.,
Shilland, E.M. & Hildrew, A.G. (2012) Evidence of recovery from
acidification in the macroinvertebrate assemblages of UK fresh waters: a
20-year time series. Ecological Indicators, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.07.009
b Ledger, M.E. & Hildrew, A.G. (2005) The ecology of
acidification and recovery: changes in herbivore-algal food web linkages
across a pH gradient in streams. Environmental Pollution, 137,
103-118.
c Monteith, D.T., Hildrew, A.G., Flower, R. J., Kreiser, J.,
Raven, P.J., Shilland, E.M. & Winterbottom, J.H. (2005) Community
responses to the recovering chemistry of acidified fresh waters in the
U.K. Environmental Pollution, 137, 83-101.
d Layer, K.L., Hildrew, A.G. & Woodward, G. (2012) Grazing and
detritivory in 20 stream food webs across a broad pH gradient. Oecologia,
171, 459-471.
e Jenkins, G.B., Woodward, G. & Hildrew, A.G. (2013) Long-term
amelioration of acidity accelerates decomposition in headwater streams. Global
Change Biology, 19, 1100-1106 -e
f Masters, Z., Petersen, I., Hildrew, A.G. & Ormerod, S.J.
(2007) Insect dispersal does not limit the biological recovery of streams
from acidification. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and
Freshwater Ecosystems, 17, 375-383.
Details of the impact
Hildrew's research on changes to ecosystem processes and lags in recovery
following freshwater acidification a-f is having an impact on
data interpretation, policy making and environmental management at
regional 1,4, national 2,3,6,7 and EU 7,8
level. Impact since 2008 has principally been facilitated in two ways:
(i) Via the UK Acid Waters Monitoring Network (UK AWMN) 2.
This network was set up by the UK Government when it entered into
international commitments to reduce emissions of SO2 from UK
sources. The network, of which Hildrew is a key member, monitors and
conducts original research on sites across the UK (22 lakes and streams,
primarily in the north and west but including less well known areas of the
south-east identified as susceptible by research at QMUL). This network
has been used by a range of international ecological surveillance
programmes (see below).
(ii) Via Defra, who use evidence provided by the UK AWMN — and in
particular the 20 Year Interpretative Report, produced in 2010 (Chapter 6
of which was principally authored by Hildrew) 3 — to influence
policy in the UK and EU (see below).
For both (i) and (ii), Hildrew is one of the principal leads on the
research into the ecological responses to deacidification a-f
and was responsible for all the data on invertebrates and key data on
fish. Hildrew's research has had substantial impact, via these routes, in
at least three different ways:
1. Provision of evidence on which the policy and practice of
organisations concerned with managing the natural environment is based
The UK AWMN supports a number of organisations responsible for
environmental management of UK surface freshwaters in relation to the EU's
Water Framework Directive and sub-Directives on priority substances and
the Habitats Directive. The organisations charged with responsibility for
ensuring water quality under the EU's Water Framework Directive (which
became UK law in 2003) include the Environment Agency (formerly England
and Wales), the Scottish Environment Protection Agency, the Environment
and Heritage Service of Northern Ireland, Natural England, Natural
Resources Wales, Scottish Natural Heritage and the Forestry Commission
(with respect to `forest and water guidelines'). The AWMN provides support
for these organisations and so assists them in meeting their statutory
obligations under this legislation 2, which in turn informs
management practices.
For example, the data and interpretations provided by Hildrew et al.
in the 20-year UK AWMN report3 (Chapter 6) resulted in a
recommendation within Natural Resources Wales to reconsider their sampling
regime for monitoring the effects of acidification on invertebrate
communities in the Welsh `model' lakes, as part of the Water Framework
Directive Lake Surveillance Network1.
The UK AWMN is such an important resource (see 2 and 3 below) that it has
recently been tasked with widening its scope to include other `long-range'
environmental stressors in the uplands (most evidently climatic changes,
but also deposition of metals and nitrogen — as agents of pollution and
eutrophication rather than acidity). Thus, from 2013, the decision has
been taken to `rebadge' it as the Upland Waters Monitoring Network (UWMN).2
2. Provision of data to inform and influence environmental policy
decisions and debates
Through the UK AWMN, Hildrew contributes vital invertebrate and fish data
(and interpretation of these data a-f) to a number of national
and international environmental surveillance programmes as evidenced by
their website 2, which states that UK AWMN
a) "contributes data from six sites to the UNECE [United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe] International Cooperative Programme
[ICP] on the Assessment and Monitoring Effects of Air Pollution on
Rivers and Lakes (ICP Waters) at the Focal Centre, NIVA, Oslo, as well
as the ICP on Integrated Monitoring (two sites)". The role of UNECE
is described and expanded on in 3., below.
b) That "Data from four AWMN sites are contributed to the UK
Environmental Change Network, the European Long-Term Ecosystem Research
Network (LTER Europe) and the International Long Term Ecological
Research (ILTER) programme".
c) That "Data from the AWMN has also been used to provide information
on acidification status of Scottish rivers to NASCO (North Atlantic
Salmon Conservation Organisation) to demonstrate improving status and
was explicitly mentioned as an important source of data in the recent
NASCO implementation plan for Scotland" 4.
In addition, Hildrew's research on ecological hysterisis in ecological
responses b,c,f, along with additional QMUL data on recovery
of fish populations from a stream in East Sussex, has been cited in the
2012 `Review of long-range, transboundary air pollution (RoTAP)' report 5,
which was produced by NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH) for
Defra, Scottish Government, Welsh Assembly Government and Department of
the Environment in Northern Ireland. The report, which examines the
available scientific evidence on the effect of air pollutants in the UK,
is directly aimed at influencing policy (as evidenced by the accompanying
`RoTAP Summary for Policy Makers' document) 5.
Thus Hildrew's research, reported through the UK AWMN and Defra, has
substantial reach across the UK and EU by allowing the efficacy of
international environmental policies to be tested. Such research is
critical in the environmental arena where changes may be slow but
substantial.
3. Contributing to the maintenance and modification of emissions
policies across the EU.
Evidence gathered through the UK AWMN has acted as a key driver in
drafting and modifying international legislation. Hildrew's research has
benefited policy and the environment by providing part of the body of
evidence to test the effectiveness of emissions reductions with respect to
the principal EU and UNECE legislation on acid deposition and surface
waters in the UK 2. To quote Environment Minister Lord Henley
and the UK Government press release 6 on the 2010
Interpretative Report from the UK AWMN: 3
"This report shows the impact of 20 years of Defra policies to tackle
acid rain and the environmental damage it causes. It also demonstrates
the opportunity we have to build on this success through forthcoming
international agreements that will allow us to return damaged rivers and
lakes to a healthy state where fish such as trout and salmon can
flourish."
"...whilst the waters are recovering, there is still a long way to go
before the plant and animal communities are restored to full
health....meaning that further emission reductions may be
necessary....... Defra is playing a key role in a number of
international agreements such as the EU National Emission Ceilings
Directive and the Gothenburg Protocol" 6
Emissions targets across the EU were indeed updated in May 2012 through
revision of the Gothenburg Protocol (CLRTAP) 7 and a recent
review of the EU National Emission Ceilings Directive by the European
Environment Agency (2012) states that a revision of this legislation is
expected imminently:
"While acidification has been markedly reduced.....an assessment using
present knowledge" (referring to adverse impacts on biodiversity)
"indicates that neither the acidification nor eutrophication objectives
have been met. The European Commission is currently reviewing the EU's
air policy and...... is expected to propose a revised NEC Directive by
2013 at the latest". 8
Thus, evidence gathered and interpreted by Hildrew for the UK AWMN and
conveyed through Defra and UNECE, ultimately helped to justify the
modification of EU emissions policy.
Sources to corroborate the impact
-
Senior Environmental Monitoring Officer (Analysis & Reporting)
Natural Resources Wales: This individual is able to verify that
Hildrew's research (as part of the UK AWMN) led to recommendations
within Natural Resources Wales to reconsider the sampling regime
required for monitoring the effects of acid deposition on invertebrate
communities in the Welsh `model' lakes covered by the EU Water Framework
Directive.
- The background, role and details of the UK Acid Water Monitoring
Network, including its specific and ongoing role in policy support, and
links to QMUL, can be found on the Defra website at: http://awmn.Defra.gov.uk/index.php
- Reports to Defra have been co-authored by QMUL scientists and
reference QMUL research, the most recent being the 20-year interpretive
report that can be found at http://awmn.Defra.gov.uk/resources/interpreports/index.php
(see Chapter 6, with QMUL authors Hildrew and Murphy).
-
www.nasco.int/implementation_plans.html
— North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organisation implementation plan
for Scotland which explicitly mentions the UK AWMN as an important
source of information on the acidification status of Scottish rivers
-
www.rotap.ceh.ac.uk/documents
— RoTAP report to which Hildrew contributed evidence as an associate
member but was not an author (see www.rotap.ceh.ac.uk/about).
The report references QMUL research. Specifically see section 5.34
`Ecological responses to reductions in acidity' and Fig. 5.19 (p 127),
which shows QMUL data.
- The UK Government press release on the UK AWMN 20-year interpretive
report3 is at www.Defra.gov.uk/news/2010/08/19/acid-rain-20-years-on
-
www.gov.uk/government/publications/emissions-of-air-pollutants
See `Emissions of air pollutants in the UK, 1970 to 2011 — revised
update', which details new commitments for reductions in SO2
and other air pollutants as a result of the 2012 revisions to the
`Gothenburg Protocol' (CLRTAP).
- Evaluation of progress under the EU National Emission Ceilings
Directive 2012 and intentions to revise current emissions targets
appears on the European Environment Agency's website at www.eea.europa.eu/publications/evaluation-progress-nec-2012