eprintid: 10077585
rev_number: 27
eprint_status: archive
userid: 608
dir: disk0/10/07/75/85
datestamp: 2019-07-09 11:29:49
lastmod: 2021-10-04 01:51:36
status_changed: 2019-07-09 11:29:49
type: article
metadata_visibility: show
creators_name: Bishop, IJ
creators_name: Bennion, H
creators_name: Sayer, CD
creators_name: Patmore, IR
creators_name: Yang, H
title: Filling the “data gap”: Using paleoecology to investigate the decline of Najas flexilis (a rare aquatic plant)
ispublished: pub
divisions: UCL
divisions: B03
divisions: C03
divisions: F26
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abstract: In the absence of long‐term monitoring records, paleoecology can be used to extend knowledge of species and community ecology into the past. The rare and declining aquatic plant Najas flexilis is a priority species for conservation across Europe, and is an ideal candidate for paleoecological study; not only are historical records of the plant sparse, but its seeds are commonly found and well preserved in lake sediment cores. In this study, we investigate the timing and causes of decline at two UK sites at which N. flexilis has recently become extinct: Esthwaite Water (England) and Loch of Craiglush (Scotland). For both sites, multiple paleoecological indicators and available historical biological records and monitoring data are compared to numbers of N. flexilis seeds enumerated in dated sediment cores representing the last 150 years. At Esthwaite Water, N. flexilis seeds were found in abundance in association with indicators of a clear, oligo‐mesotrophic, mildly alkaline lake. Eutrophication led to the disappearance of N. flexilis in the 1980s. By contrast, far fewer N. flexilis seeds were found in a core from Loch of Craiglush, and the current period of N. flexilis absence was found to be one of several over the last 100 years. Species represented in cores taken from Loch of Craiglush were indicative of slightly more acidic conditions than Esthwaite Water. Given that N. flexilis favours circumneutral to alkaline conditions, it is possible that Loch of Craiglush has not always been favourable for the plant. These findings have important implications for future conservation efforts, particularly at Esthwaite Water where they suggest that recent failed attempts to reintroduce the species may have been premature. More generally, this study demonstrates the value of paleoecological techniques as a means to provide the long‐term context that is often missing from conservation planning and management.
date: 2019-07-04
date_type: published
publisher: Wiley
official_url: https://doi.org/10.1002/geo2.81
oa_status: green
full_text_type: pub
language: eng
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
article_type_text: Article
verified: verified_manual
elements_id: 1671130
doi: 10.1002/geo2.81
lyricists_name: Bennion, Helen
lyricists_name: Bishop, Isabel
lyricists_name: Sayer, Carl
lyricists_name: Yang, Handong
lyricists_id: HBENN58
lyricists_id: IBISH99
lyricists_id: CSAYE52
lyricists_id: HYANG48
actors_name: Stacey, Thomas
actors_id: TSSTA20
actors_role: owner
full_text_status: public
publication: Geo: Geography and Environment
volume: 6
number: 2
article_number: e00081
issn: 2054-4049
citation:        Bishop, IJ;    Bennion, H;    Sayer, CD;    Patmore, IR;    Yang, H;      (2019)    Filling the “data gap”: Using paleoecology to investigate the decline of Najas flexilis (a rare aquatic plant).                   Geo: Geography and Environment , 6  (2)    , Article e00081.  10.1002/geo2.81 <https://doi.org/10.1002/geo2.81>.       Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10077585/7/Bennion%20Bishop_et_al-2019-Geo__Geography_and_Environment.pdf