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Details of Award

NERC Reference : NE/J014826/1

Diversity in Upland Rivers for Ecosystem Service Sustainability - DURESS

Grant Award

Principal Investigator:
Dr NA Chappell, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Co-Investigator:
Professor J Quinton, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Co-Investigator:
Dr BWJ Surridge, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Co-Investigator:
Professor K Beven, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Co-Investigator:
Dr W Tych, Lancaster University, Lancaster Environment Centre
Science Area:
Freshwater
Terrestrial
Overall Classification:
Freshwater
ENRIs:
Biodiversity
Global Change
Natural Resource Management
Pollution and Waste
Science Topics:
Climate & Climate Change
Community Ecology
Biogeochemical Cycles
Ecosystem Scale Processes
Water Quality
Abstract:
With the UK's water valued at #200 billion p.a., Britain's 389,000 km of river ecosystems are arguably our most important. In addition to providing water, they supply other major ecosystem services such as the regulation of flooding and water quality; support to adjacent ecosystems by supplying energy and nutrients; and large cultural value for charismatic organisms, recreation, and education. However, the ways in which organisms and ecosystem functions maintain these services in rivers are extremely poorly understood. This is despite large ongoing effects on river organisms from changing catchment land use, and increasingly also from climate change. Cost implications are large and result, for example, from impacts on recreational fisheries, water treatment costs, and high value river biodiversity. By contrast, opportunities to use management positively to increase the ecosystem service value of rivers by enhancing beneficial in-river organisms have barely been considered. In this project, we will focus on four examples of river ecosystem services chosen to be explicitly biodiversity-mediated: the regulation of water quality; the regulation of decomposition; fisheries and recreational fishing; and river birds as culturally valued biodiversity. Each is at risk from climate/land use change, illustrating their sensitivity to disturbance thresholds over different time scales. These services vary in attributable market values, and all require an integrated physical, biogeochemical, ecological and socio-economic science perspective that none of the project partners could deliver alone. Using river microbes, invertebrates, fish and river birds at levels of organisation from genes to food webs, we will test the overarching hypothesis that: "Biodiversity is central to the sustainable delivery of upland river ecosystem services under changing land-use and climate". Specifically, we will ask: 1. What is the range of services delivered by upland rivers, and which are biologically mediated? 2. What are the links between biodiversity (from genes to food webs) and service delivery? 3. How does river biodiversity affect the rate or resilience of ecosystem service delivery through time? 4. How do changes in catchment land use/ management and climate affect river biota? 5. How should river biodiversity be managed to sustain ecosystem services? At spatial scales ranging from small experimental catchments to the whole region, and at temporal scales from sub-annual to over three decades, the work will be carried out in upland Wales as a well-defined geographical area of the UK that is particularly rich in the spatially extensive and long-term data required for the project.
Period of Award:
1 May 2012 - 30 Jun 2016
Value:
£530,792 Split Award
Authorised funds only
NERC Reference:
NE/J014826/1
Grant Stage:
Completed
Scheme:
Directed (Research Programmes)
Grant Status:
Closed
Programme:
BESS

This grant award has a total value of £530,792  

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FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)

DI - Other CostsIndirect - Indirect CostsDA - InvestigatorsDI - StaffDA - Estate CostsDA - Other Directly AllocatedDI - T&S
£213,197£114,743£34,849£102,721£46,820£2,172£16,291

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