Impacts of human-induced en- vironmental change in wetlands on aquatic animals. Biol. Rev. 93, 529-554.Sievers, M., R. Hale, K. M. Parris, and S. E. Swearer. 2018a. Impacts of human-induced environmental change in wetlands on aquatic animals. Biological Reviews 93:529-554....
These findings are important as efforts are made to protect the wintering waterbirds from the effects of human intervention, particularly at other Ramsar wetlands.doi:10.1038/s41598-017-14317-9Zou, Ye-AiPan, Bai-HanZhang, HongZhang, Ping-Yang...
Ponds and lakes, streams and rivers, wetlands and estuaries and the plants and animals that live within them make up freshwater biomes. Human activities are significantly impacting and endangering freshwater biomes, which comprise one-fifth of the earth’s surface. Freshwater biomes are declining wor...
There have been only a few studies to date examining the effect of climate change alone on human health burdens from air quality; for PM2.5studies have focussed on long-term exposure, whilst for O3studies have considered either short-term or long-term exposure. Fang et al. [50] quantified ...
to human welfare Wetlands are highly dependent on water levels, and so changes in climatic conditions (e.g. hydrological cycle, i.e. the nature and variability of the wet and dry seasons, and the number and severity of extreme events) will highly influence its structure and functioning. ...
Coastal populations and wetlands have been intertwined for centuries, whereby humans both influence and depend on the extensive ecosystem services that wetlands provide. Although coastal wetlands have long been considered vulnerable to sea-level rise, re
Replacing wetlands with impervious surfacessets the stage for a flood event. By reducing the amount o impervious surface through city and local planning,flash flooding can be prevented.Natural disaster prevention also relies on the individual. The American Red Cross provides training for individuals to...
Sample 1 Based on 1 documents SaveCopy Examples of Secondary impacts in a sentence Impacts of groundwater withdrawals upon wetlands and other surface waters that result from the use of wells permitted pursuant to the District consumptive use rules shall not be considered under the rules adopted purs...
A warmer and drier climate, as predicted, will negatively affect the productivity of PPR wetlands and the services they provide. The effect of climate change on wetland productivity, however, will not only depend on natural processes (e.g., evapotranspiration), but also on human responses. ...
The encompassed human population, food crop production, gross domestic product (GDP), biodiversity, and wetlands enumerate the potential social-ecological impacts from the current state of global freshwater stress and storage trends. Around 2.2 billion people, 27% of global food crop production, and ...