The largest blue-green infrastructures in industrialized, urbanized and developed regions in China are often multiuse wetlands, located just outside growing urban centers. These areas have multiple development pressures while providing environmental, economic, and social benefits to the local and regional populations. Given the limited information available about the tradeoffs in ecosystem services with respect to competing wetland uses, wetland managers and provincial decision makers face challenges in regulating the use of these important landscapes. In the present study, measurements made by citizen scientists were used to support a comparative study of water quality and wetland functions in two large multiuse wetlands, comparing areas of natural wetland vegetation, tourism-based wetland management and wetland agriculture. The study sites, the Nansha and Tianfu wetlands, are located in two of the most urbanized areas of China: the lower Yangtze River and Pearl River catchments, respectively. Our results indicated that the capacity of wetlands to mitigate water quality is closely related to the quality of the surrounding waters and hydrological conditions. Agricultural areas in both wetlands provided the lowest sediment and nutrient retention. The results show that the delivery of supporting ecosystem services is strongly in-fluenced by the location and use of the wetland. Furthermore, we show that citizen scientist-ac-quired data can provide fundamental information on quantifying these ecosystem services, providing needed information to wetland park managers and provincial wetland administrators.

Zhang, Y., Loiselle, S., Zhang, Y., Wang, Q., Sun, X., Hu, M., et al. (2021). Comparing wetland ecosystems service provision under different management approaches: Two cases study of tianfu wetland and nansha wetland in China. SUSTAINABILITY, 13(16) [10.3390/su13168710].

Comparing wetland ecosystems service provision under different management approaches: Two cases study of tianfu wetland and nansha wetland in China

Loiselle S.;
2021-01-01

Abstract

The largest blue-green infrastructures in industrialized, urbanized and developed regions in China are often multiuse wetlands, located just outside growing urban centers. These areas have multiple development pressures while providing environmental, economic, and social benefits to the local and regional populations. Given the limited information available about the tradeoffs in ecosystem services with respect to competing wetland uses, wetland managers and provincial decision makers face challenges in regulating the use of these important landscapes. In the present study, measurements made by citizen scientists were used to support a comparative study of water quality and wetland functions in two large multiuse wetlands, comparing areas of natural wetland vegetation, tourism-based wetland management and wetland agriculture. The study sites, the Nansha and Tianfu wetlands, are located in two of the most urbanized areas of China: the lower Yangtze River and Pearl River catchments, respectively. Our results indicated that the capacity of wetlands to mitigate water quality is closely related to the quality of the surrounding waters and hydrological conditions. Agricultural areas in both wetlands provided the lowest sediment and nutrient retention. The results show that the delivery of supporting ecosystem services is strongly in-fluenced by the location and use of the wetland. Furthermore, we show that citizen scientist-ac-quired data can provide fundamental information on quantifying these ecosystem services, providing needed information to wetland park managers and provincial wetland administrators.
2021
Zhang, Y., Loiselle, S., Zhang, Y., Wang, Q., Sun, X., Hu, M., et al. (2021). Comparing wetland ecosystems service provision under different management approaches: Two cases study of tianfu wetland and nansha wetland in China. SUSTAINABILITY, 13(16) [10.3390/su13168710].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11365/1278545