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The use of a GIS-based inventory to provide a regional risk assessment of standing waters in Great Britain sensitive to acidification from atmospheric deposition

The use of a GIS-based inventory to provide a regional risk assessment of standing waters in Great Britain sensitive to acidification from atmospheric deposition
The use of a GIS-based inventory to provide a regional risk assessment of standing waters in Great Britain sensitive to acidification from atmospheric deposition

Previous attempts to identify regions of Britain vulnerable to acidification have used sensitivity maps based on the distribution of soils, geology, and land cover across Great Britain. Additionally, a systematic survey of freshwaters undertaken as part of the U.K. critical loads mapping programme provides a regional assessment of both sensitivity (critical loads) and, in tandem with deposition data, potential impact (critical load exceedance). Both approaches, while useful for identifying regional patterns, do not enable estimates of the number of affected water bodies to be made. Recent EU legislation (e.g., The Water Framework Directive) requires member states to set water quality objectives for all water bodies. We developed a GIS-based inventory of standing water bodies in response to the need for legislation-driven assessments of the status of the U.K. lake population. This paper describes how the inventory can be used to assess the number of standing water bodies in Britain that are vulnerable to acid deposition (at current levels), building on the sensitivity mapping undertaken previously. Using this approach, approximately 31% of all standing waters in Great Britain (excluding the Shetlands and Orkney) larger than 0.02 ha are identified as 'at risk' from acidification. Higher proportions are vulnerable in Scotland and Wales. Additionally, large numbers of standing waters in areas designated for environmental protection purposes are also vulnerable.

Acidification, Freshwater sensitivity, GIS, Great Britain Standing Waters Inventory, Lakes, Risk assessment
1567-7230
97-112
Kernan, M.
f5938d9d-0064-4f40-b5be-e6a9141f012b
Hughes, M.
3544b2a0-06e1-4060-beb5-57543a230a03
Hornby, D.
75cfaf57-72c1-4392-a78c-89b4b1033dca
Bennion, H.
75dad48f-1606-4254-981f-d79c65b67c35
Hilton, J.
a9a31104-c5c8-468b-8b19-d80043075469
Phillips, G.
394caa1e-dba4-48cd-97e1-c2ed5c54f825
Thomas, R.
abe56e8c-e51f-440e-9ea8-854cbd346666
Kernan, M.
f5938d9d-0064-4f40-b5be-e6a9141f012b
Hughes, M.
3544b2a0-06e1-4060-beb5-57543a230a03
Hornby, D.
75cfaf57-72c1-4392-a78c-89b4b1033dca
Bennion, H.
75dad48f-1606-4254-981f-d79c65b67c35
Hilton, J.
a9a31104-c5c8-468b-8b19-d80043075469
Phillips, G.
394caa1e-dba4-48cd-97e1-c2ed5c54f825
Thomas, R.
abe56e8c-e51f-440e-9ea8-854cbd346666

Kernan, M., Hughes, M., Hornby, D., Bennion, H., Hilton, J., Phillips, G. and Thomas, R. (2004) The use of a GIS-based inventory to provide a regional risk assessment of standing waters in Great Britain sensitive to acidification from atmospheric deposition. Water, Air, and Soil Pollution: Focus, 4 (2-3), 97-112. (doi:10.1023/B:WAFO.0000028348.66845.d6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Previous attempts to identify regions of Britain vulnerable to acidification have used sensitivity maps based on the distribution of soils, geology, and land cover across Great Britain. Additionally, a systematic survey of freshwaters undertaken as part of the U.K. critical loads mapping programme provides a regional assessment of both sensitivity (critical loads) and, in tandem with deposition data, potential impact (critical load exceedance). Both approaches, while useful for identifying regional patterns, do not enable estimates of the number of affected water bodies to be made. Recent EU legislation (e.g., The Water Framework Directive) requires member states to set water quality objectives for all water bodies. We developed a GIS-based inventory of standing water bodies in response to the need for legislation-driven assessments of the status of the U.K. lake population. This paper describes how the inventory can be used to assess the number of standing water bodies in Britain that are vulnerable to acid deposition (at current levels), building on the sensitivity mapping undertaken previously. Using this approach, approximately 31% of all standing waters in Great Britain (excluding the Shetlands and Orkney) larger than 0.02 ha are identified as 'at risk' from acidification. Higher proportions are vulnerable in Scotland and Wales. Additionally, large numbers of standing waters in areas designated for environmental protection purposes are also vulnerable.

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More information

Published date: June 2004
Keywords: Acidification, Freshwater sensitivity, GIS, Great Britain Standing Waters Inventory, Lakes, Risk assessment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 433383
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/433383
ISSN: 1567-7230
PURE UUID: a1987fb4-b6b1-411c-b863-43880d97c042
ORCID for D. Hornby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6295-1360

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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2019 16:30
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:42

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Contributors

Author: M. Kernan
Author: M. Hughes
Author: D. Hornby ORCID iD
Author: H. Bennion
Author: J. Hilton
Author: G. Phillips
Author: R. Thomas

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