2019
DOI: 10.1002/iroh.201902000
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Urbanisation reduces litter breakdown rates and affects benthic invertebrate structure in Pampean streams

Abstract: The Pampean region has become one of the most urbanised areas in South America with more than 91% of the Argentinean population. This region is ideal for human settlements that have historically chosen riverine grassland areas to settle. Consequently, urban streams are increasingly subjected to pressures affecting their functioning. The aim of this study was to assess urbanisation effects on two proxies of stream integrity: leaf litter decay and benthic invertebrate assemblage colonizing litter in streams drai… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 93 publications
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“…Anthropogenic activities generally lead to simultaneous changes in multiple environmental variables, which may have contrasting effects on aquatic communities and litter decomposition. For instance, forestry, agriculture, urbanization, industry, and mining can lead to changes in the following environmental variables, the magnitude and direction of the change depending on the type, and the extent and intensity of human activities: riparian vegetation cover and diversity, litter inputs, solar irradiation, water temperature, DO concentration, water flow, channel form, sedimentation, and nutrient concentrations [76,[106][107][108][109][110]. Some activities can also result in the input of pharmaceuticals, pesticides, heavy metals, and organic pollution, which are generally not present in streams in the absence of human activities.…”
Section: Major Moderators and Sensitivity To Environmental Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anthropogenic activities generally lead to simultaneous changes in multiple environmental variables, which may have contrasting effects on aquatic communities and litter decomposition. For instance, forestry, agriculture, urbanization, industry, and mining can lead to changes in the following environmental variables, the magnitude and direction of the change depending on the type, and the extent and intensity of human activities: riparian vegetation cover and diversity, litter inputs, solar irradiation, water temperature, DO concentration, water flow, channel form, sedimentation, and nutrient concentrations [76,[106][107][108][109][110]. Some activities can also result in the input of pharmaceuticals, pesticides, heavy metals, and organic pollution, which are generally not present in streams in the absence of human activities.…”
Section: Major Moderators and Sensitivity To Environmental Changementioning
confidence: 99%