Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States

The transformation of a river into a reservoir and the subsequent occupation of the riverbed by a reservoir can impact freshwater ecosystems and their biodiversity. We used the National Lake Assessment (134 reservoirs) and the National Rivers and Streams Assessment (2062 rivers and streams) of the U...

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Main Authors: Gabrielle Trottier, Katrine Turgeon, Francesca Verones, Daniel Boisclair, Cécile Bulle, Manuele Margni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2701
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spelling doaj-2b73c709ce794084937c3965e23d0e132021-03-04T00:01:04ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-03-01132701270110.3390/su13052701Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United StatesGabrielle Trottier0Katrine Turgeon1Francesca Verones2Daniel Boisclair3Cécile Bulle4Manuele Margni5CIRAIG, Département de Mathématiques et Génie Industriel, Polytechnique Montréal, Montréal, QC H3C 3A7, CanadaISFORT, Université du Québec en Outaouais, Ripon, QC J0V 1V0, CanadaIndustrial Ecology Program, Department of Energy and Process Engineering, NTNU, 7491 Trondheim, NorwayDépartement des Sciences Biologiques, Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC H3C 3A7, CanadaCIRAIG, Département de Mathématiques et Génie Industriel, Polytechnique Montréal, Montréal, QC H3C 3A7, CanadaCIRAIG, Département de Mathématiques et Génie Industriel, Polytechnique Montréal, Montréal, QC H3C 3A7, CanadaThe transformation of a river into a reservoir and the subsequent occupation of the riverbed by a reservoir can impact freshwater ecosystems and their biodiversity. We used the National Lake Assessment (134 reservoirs) and the National Rivers and Streams Assessment (2062 rivers and streams) of the United States Environmental Protection Agency in order to develop empirical characterization factors (CFs; in Potentially Disappeared Fraction of species [PDF]) evaluating the impacts of reservoir occupation on macroinvertebrate richness (number of taxa) at the reservoir, ecoregion and country spatial scales, using a space-for-time substitution. We used analyses of variance, variation partitioning, and multiple regression analysis to explain the role of ecoregion (or regionalization; accounting for spatial variability) and other potentially influential variables (physical, chemical and anthropogenic), on PDFs. At the United States scale, 28% of macroinvertebrate taxa disappeared during reservoir occupation and PDFs followed a longitudinal gradient across ecoregions, where PDFs were higher in the west. We also observed that high elevation, oligotrophic and large reservoirs had high PDF. This study provides the first empirical macroinvertebrate-based PDFs for reservoir occupation to be used as CFs by LCA practitioners. The results provide strong support for regionalization and a simple empirical model for LCA modelers.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2701Life Cycle Assessmentreservoirsbiodiversitymacroinvertebrateswater managementaquatic ecology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabrielle Trottier
Katrine Turgeon
Francesca Verones
Daniel Boisclair
Cécile Bulle
Manuele Margni
spellingShingle Gabrielle Trottier
Katrine Turgeon
Francesca Verones
Daniel Boisclair
Cécile Bulle
Manuele Margni
Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
Sustainability
Life Cycle Assessment
reservoirs
biodiversity
macroinvertebrates
water management
aquatic ecology
author_facet Gabrielle Trottier
Katrine Turgeon
Francesca Verones
Daniel Boisclair
Cécile Bulle
Manuele Margni
author_sort Gabrielle Trottier
title Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
title_short Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
title_full Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
title_fullStr Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
title_full_unstemmed Empirical Characterization Factors for Life Cycle Assessment of the Impacts of Reservoir Occupation on Macroinvertebrate Richness across the United States
title_sort empirical characterization factors for life cycle assessment of the impacts of reservoir occupation on macroinvertebrate richness across the united states
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The transformation of a river into a reservoir and the subsequent occupation of the riverbed by a reservoir can impact freshwater ecosystems and their biodiversity. We used the National Lake Assessment (134 reservoirs) and the National Rivers and Streams Assessment (2062 rivers and streams) of the United States Environmental Protection Agency in order to develop empirical characterization factors (CFs; in Potentially Disappeared Fraction of species [PDF]) evaluating the impacts of reservoir occupation on macroinvertebrate richness (number of taxa) at the reservoir, ecoregion and country spatial scales, using a space-for-time substitution. We used analyses of variance, variation partitioning, and multiple regression analysis to explain the role of ecoregion (or regionalization; accounting for spatial variability) and other potentially influential variables (physical, chemical and anthropogenic), on PDFs. At the United States scale, 28% of macroinvertebrate taxa disappeared during reservoir occupation and PDFs followed a longitudinal gradient across ecoregions, where PDFs were higher in the west. We also observed that high elevation, oligotrophic and large reservoirs had high PDF. This study provides the first empirical macroinvertebrate-based PDFs for reservoir occupation to be used as CFs by LCA practitioners. The results provide strong support for regionalization and a simple empirical model for LCA modelers.
topic Life Cycle Assessment
reservoirs
biodiversity
macroinvertebrates
water management
aquatic ecology
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2701
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