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Multiple Stressors - Literature Review and Gap Analysis (Paperback, Annotated edition)
Loot Price: R3,224
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Multiple Stressors - Literature Review and Gap Analysis (Paperback, Annotated edition)
Series: WERF Research Report Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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There is a pressing need for developing and testing a general set
of theories in order to provide a confident basis for prediction of
multiple stressor effects. Confident prediction is central to
confident decision making in water pollution control. Consequently,
WERF commissioned this study, which has as its goal to provide a
study design based on good science that helps establish a general,
conceptual approach to multiple stressors. The objectives addressed
in this report are: (1) review and critique the existing body of
knowledge for multiple stressors; (2) develop a searchable,
annotated bibliography of multiple stressor research; and, (3)
identify gaps in the body of knowledge. A rigorous, theoretical
basis for the prediction of multiple stressor effects could not be
developed from the literature on experimental studies of multiple
stressor effects in aquatic ecosystems. Despite the wealth of
observational data, the existence of several useful tools for
interpretation of cause/effect relationships (including formal
Stressor Identification methods), and the studies reviewed in this
report, there are no tools that allow a confident, a priori,
prediction of ecosystem response to multiple stressors. The current
literature provides, at best, a series of site-specific glimpses of
the response of ecological communities and ecosystems to multiple
stressors. There is seldom, if ever, any reference to a more
generalized model of multiple stressor effects apart from the
discussion of the expectations regarding additivity versus
synergism. Many articles that purport to be multiple stressor
studies do not go beyond an inventory of the various stresses and
upsets affecting the ecosystem, without attempting to assess the
interactions among them. Some papers define the multiple stressor
problems in terms of building a weight-of-evidence case for
cause/effect relationships among stressors and receptors, or refer
to a suggested general response pattern to stressors based upon
effects-based monitoring. However, even these papers seldom place
the definition of the problem in a wider framework provided by a
general model. One notable exception presents three testable
hypotheses concerning general responses of ecosystems to stress.
They are: (1) a given biotic compartment in an incrementally
stressed ecosystem will show suppression of biodiversity first and
suppression of biomass subsequently (similar to the idea expressed
by Schindler; (2) suppression of ecosystem function is primarily
caused by reduced biomass, rather than loss of diversity itself;
and (3) suppression of biomass differs among biotic compartments
according to a predictable series of thresholds (i.e.,
multicellular organisms are more sensitive than unicellular
autotrophic algae which are more sensitive than microbial
decomposers).
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