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Featured researches published by Seppo Hellsten.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Managing aquatic ecosystems and water resources under multiple stress--an introduction to the MARS project.

Daniel Hering; Laurence Carvalho; Christine Argillier; Meryem Beklioglu; Ángel Borja; Ana Cristina Cardoso; Harm Duel; Teresa Ferreira; Lidija Globevnik; Jenica Hanganu; Seppo Hellsten; Erik Jeppesen; Vit Kodes; Anne Lyche Solheim; Tiina Nõges; Stephen James Ormerod; Yiannis Panagopoulos; Stefan Schmutz; Markus Venohr; Sebastian Birk

Water resources globally are affected by a complex mixture of stressors resulting from a range of drivers, including urban and agricultural land use, hydropower generation and climate change. Understanding how stressors interfere and impact upon ecological status and ecosystem services is essential for developing effective River Basin Management Plans and shaping future environmental policy. This paper details the nature of these problems for Europes water resources and the need to find solutions at a range of spatial scales. In terms of the latter, we describe the aims and approaches of the EU-funded project MARS (Managing Aquatic ecosystems and water Resources under multiple Stress) and the conceptual and analytical framework that it is adopting to provide this knowledge, understanding and tools needed to address multiple stressors. MARS is operating at three scales: At the water body scale, the mechanistic understanding of stressor interactions and their impact upon water resources, ecological status and ecosystem services will be examined through multi-factorial experiments and the analysis of long time-series. At the river basin scale, modelling and empirical approaches will be adopted to characterise relationships between multiple stressors and ecological responses, functions, services and water resources. The effects of future land use and mitigation scenarios in 16 European river basins will be assessed. At the European scale, large-scale spatial analysis will be carried out to identify the relationships amongst stress intensity, ecological status and service provision, with a special focus on large transboundary rivers, lakes and fish. The project will support managers and policy makers in the practical implementation of the Water Framework Directive (WFD), of related legislation and of the Blueprint to Safeguard Europes Water Resources by advising the 3rd River Basin Management Planning cycle, the revision of the WFD and by developing new tools for diagnosing and predicting multiple stressors.


Aquatic Ecology | 2008

Classifying aquatic macrophytes as indicators of eutrophication in European lakes

W. Ellis Penning; Marit Mjelde; Bernard Dudley; Seppo Hellsten; Jenica Hanganu; Agnieszka Kolada; Marcel S. van den Berg; Sandra Poikane; Geoff Phillips; Nigel Willby; Frauke Ecke

Aquatic macrophytes are one of the biological quality elements in the Water Framework Directive (WFD) for which status assessments must be defined. We tested two methods to classify macrophyte species and their response to eutrophication pressure: one based on percentiles of occurrence along a phosphorous gradient and another based on trophic ranking of species using Canonical Correspondence Analyses in the ranking procedure. The methods were tested at Europe-wide, regional and national scale as well as by alkalinity category, using 1,147 lakes from 12 European states. The grouping of species as sensitive, tolerant or indifferent to eutrophication was evaluated for some taxa, such as the sensitive Chara spp. and the large isoetids, by analysing the (non-linear) response curve along a phosphorous gradient. These thresholds revealed in these response curves can be used to set boundaries among different ecological status classes. In total 48 taxa out of 114 taxa were classified identically regardless of dataset or classification method. These taxa can be considered the most consistent and reliable indicators of sensitivity or tolerance to eutrophication at European scale. Although the general response of well known indicator species seems to hold, there are many species that were evaluated differently according to the database selection and classification methods. This hampers a Europe-wide comparison of classified species lists as used for the status assessment within the WFD implementation process.


Aquatic Ecology | 2008

Using aquatic macrophyte community indices to define the ecological status of European lakes

W. Ellis Penning; Bernard Dudley; Marit Mjelde; Seppo Hellsten; Jenika Hanganu; Agnieszka Kolada; Marcel S. van den Berg; Sandra Poikane; Geoff Phillips; Nigel Willby; Frauke Ecke

Defining the overall ecological status of lakes according to the Water Framework Directive (WFD) is to be partially based on the species composition of the aquatic macrophyte community. We tested three assessment methods to define the ecological status of the macrophyte community in response to a eutrophication pressure as reflected by total phosphorus concentrations in lake water. An absolute species richness, a trophic index (TI) and a lake trophic ranking (LTR) method were tested at Europe-wide, regional and national scales as well as by alkalinity category, using data from 1,147 lakes from 12 European states. Total phosphorus data were used to represent the trophic status of individual samples and were plotted against the calculated TI and LTR values. Additionally, the LTR method was tested in some individual lakes with a relatively long time series of monitoring data. The TI correlated well with total P in the Northern European lake types, whereas the relationship in the Central European lake types was less clear. The relationship between total P and light extinction is often very good in the Northern European lake types compared to the Central European lake types. This can be one of the reasons for a better agreement between the indices and eutrophication pressure in the Northern European lake types. The response of individual lakes to changes in the abiotic environment was sometimes represented incorrectly by the indices used, which is a cause of concern for the use of single indices in status assessments in practice.


Hydrobiologia | 2013

Ecological status assessment of European lakes: a comparison of metrics for phytoplankton, macrophytes, benthic invertebrates and fish

Anne Lyche-Solheim; Christian K. Feld; Sebastian Birk; Geoff Phillips; Laurence Carvalho; Giuseppe Morabito; Ute Mischke; Nigel Willby; Martin Søndergaard; Seppo Hellsten; Agnieszka Kolada; Marit Mjelde; Jürgen Böhmer; Oliver Miler; Martin T. Pusch; Christine Argillier; Erik Jeppesen; Torben L. Lauridsen; Sandra Poikane

Data on phytoplankton, macrophytes, benthic invertebrates and fish from more than 2000 lakes in 22 European countries were used to develop and test metrics for assessing the ecological status of European lakes as required by the Water Framework Directive. The strongest and most sensitive of the 11 metrics responding to eutrophication pressure were phytoplankton chlorophyll a, a taxonomic composition trophic index and a functional traits index, the macrophyte intercalibration taxonomic composition metric and a Nordic lake fish index. Intermediate response was found for a cyanobacterial bloom intensity index (Cyano), the Ellenberg macrophyte index and a multimetric index for benthic invertebrates. The latter also responded to hydromorphological pressure. The metrics provide information on primary and secondary impacts of eutrophication in the pelagic and the littoral zone of lakes. Several of these metrics were used as common metrics in the intercalibration of national assessment systems or have been incorporated directly into the national systems. New biological metrics have been developed to assess hydromorphological pressures, based on aquatic macrophyte responses to water level fluctuations, and on macroinvertebrate responses to morphological modifications of lake shorelines. These metrics thus enable the quantification of biological impacts of hydromorphological pressures in lakes.


Plant and Soil | 2002

Exchange of CO2, CH4 and N2O between the atmosphere and two northern boreal ponds with catchments dominated by peatlands or forests

Jari T. Huttunen; Tero Väisänen; Mirja Heikkinen; Seppo Hellsten; Hannu Nykänen; Olli Nenonen; Pertti J. Martikainen

Concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) in the water column and their exchange at the water/air interface were studied during the open water period in two freshwater ponds with different catchment characteristics in the northern boreal zone in Finland; either peatlands or coniferous upland forests dominated the catchment of the ponds. Both ponds were supersaturated with dissolved CO2 and CH4 with respect to the equilibrium with the atmosphere, but were close to the equilibrium with N2O. The mean CO2 efflux from the pond was higher in the peatland-dominated catchment (22 mg m−2 h−1) than in the forested catchment (0.7 mg m−2 h−1), whereas the mean CH4 emissions were similar (7.6 and 3.5 mg m−2 d−1, respectively). The fluxes of N2O were generally negligible. The higher CO2 concentrations and efflux in the pond with the peatland-dominated catchment were attributed to a greater input of allochthonous carbon to that pond from its catchment due to its higher water colour and higher total organic carbon (TOC) concentration. The water pH, which also differed between the ponds, could additionally affect the CO2 dynamics. Since the catchment characteristics can regulate aquatic carbon cycles, catchment-scale studies are needed to attain a deeper understanding of the aquatic greenhouse gas dynamics.


Hydrobiologia | 2013

Measurements of uncertainty in macrophyte metrics used to assess European lake water quality

Bernard Dudley; Michael J. Dunbar; Ellis Penning; Agnieszka Kolada; Seppo Hellsten; Alessandro Oggioni; Vincent Bertrin; Frauke Ecke; Martin Søndergaard

Uncertainty is an important factor in ecological assessment, and has important implications for the ecological classification and management of lakes. However, our knowledge of the effects of uncertainty in the assessment of different ecological indicators is limited. Here, we used data from a standardized campaign of aquatic plant surveys, in 28 lakes from 10 European countries, to assess variation in macrophyte metrics across a set of nested spatial scales: countries, lakes, sampling stations, replicate transects, and replicate samples at two depth-zones. Metrics investigated in each transect included taxa richness, maximum depth of colonisation and two indicators of trophic status: Ellenberg’s N and a metric based on phosphorus trophic status. Metrics were found to have a slightly stronger relationship to pressures when they were calculated on abundance data compared to presence/absence data. Eutrophication metrics based on helophytes were found not to be useful in assessing the effects of nutrient pressure. These metrics were also found to vary with the depth of sampling, with shallower taxa representing higher trophic status. This study demonstrates the complex spatial variability in macrophyte communities, the effect of this variability on the metrics, and the implications to water managers, especially in relation to survey design.


Hydrobiologia | 2013

A water level drawdown index for aquatic macrophytes in Nordic lakes

Marit Mjelde; Seppo Hellsten; Frauke Ecke

Many northern lakes are regulated to enhance hydropower production and flood protection. This bears hydromorphological pressures which are important factors causing lowered ecological status. Water level fluctuation triggers erosion on the shoreline and, depending on fluctuation range, also affects species composition or disappearance of sensitive aquatic macrophytes. We developed a water level-drawdown index (WIc) for Nordic lakes using macrophyte data from 73 lakes with varying water level fluctuation in Finland, Norway and Sweden. The index is based on the ratio between sensitive and tolerant macrophyte species. The sensitive and tolerant species are identified based on a percentile approach, analysing the presence or absence of species along the winter drawdown range. The index correlates well with winter drawdown in Finnish and Norwegian lakes with strongest correlations with winter drawdown in storage lakes (lakes regulated for hydroelectric power and with a considerable winter drawdown). The WIc-index is applicable in low alkalinity, oligotrophic and ice-covered lakes, and is suggested to be a useful tool to identify and designate heavily modified water bodies in Nordic lakes according to the European Water Framework Directive.


Archive | 2014

Status and Causal Pathway Assessments Supporting River Basin Management

Peter C. von der Ohe; Sabine E. Apitz; Kęstutis Arbačiauskas; Mikhail A. Beketov; Dietrich Borchardt; Dick de Zwart; Willem Goedkoop; Michaela Hein; Seppo Hellsten; Daniel Hering; Ben J. Kefford; Vadim E. Panov; Ralf B. Schäfer; Helmut Segner; Jos van Gils; Joop Vegter; Markus A. Wetzel; Werner Brack

The European Water Framework Directive (WFD) requires a status assessment of all water bodies. If that status is deteriorated, the WFD urges the identification of its potential causes in order to be able to suggest appropriate management measures. The instrument of investigative monitoring allows for such identification, provided that appropriate tools are available to link the observed effects to causative stressors, while unravelling confounding factors. In this chapter, the state of the art of status and causal pathway assessment is described for the major stressors responsible for the deterioration of European water bodies, i.e. toxicity, acidification, salinisation, eutrophication and oxygen depletion, parasites and pathogens, invasive alien species, hydromorphological degradation, changing water levels as well as sediments and suspended matter. For each stressor, an extensive description of the potential effects on the ecological status is given. Secondly, stressor-specific abiotic and biotic indicators are described that allow for a first indication of probable causes, based on the assessment of available monitoring data. Subsequently, more advanced tools for site-specific confirmation of stressors at hand are discussed. Finally, the local status assessments are put into the perspective of the risk for downstream stretches in order to be able to prioritise stressors and to be able to select appropriate measures for mitigation of the risks resulting from these stressors.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2003

Effective Biological Control of Salvinia molesta in the Senegal River by Means of the Weevil Cyrtobagous salviniae

Arnold H. Pieterse; Marianne Kettunen; Sara Diouf; Ismael Ndao; Khady Sarr; Anne Tarvainen; Sandra Kloff; Seppo Hellsten

Abstract The invasion of Salvinia molesta in the Lower Senegal River Delta in Mauritania and Senegal in 1999 posed a serious threat to the socioeconomic conditions of the local people as well as to wetland biodiversity. Eventually, an effective biological control of S. molesta was obtained by means of the weevil Cyrtobagous salviniae, which was introduced in the river in Senegal and Mauritania in May 2000 and in Senegal in April 2001. In October 2001, it became apparent that the weevils were doing a magnificent job. The color of the plants was turning from green to dark-brown or black, and subsequently the plants started to sink to the bottom. Detailed monitoring of the dispersal of C. salviniae in November–December 2001 confirmed the visual observations of the outcome of biological control. In April 2002, it could be concluded that S. molesta was no longer a problem in the Senegal River.


SIL Proceedings, 1922-2010 | 2006

The effect of water level regulation on species richness and abundance of aquatic macrophytes in Finnish lakes

Antton Keto; Anne Tarvainen; Seppo Hellsten

More than 300 lakes, including most of Finlands large lakes, are under artificial water level regulation d ue to hydro power production or flood protection. In Finland, several research projects related to regulated lakes have shown the central ro le o f water level regulation as a source of hydro-morphological disturbance ( e.g. MARTTUI\u.; e t al. 200 l). Changes in water level fluctuation may have harmful impacts on the littoral zone and especially on aquatic macrophytes (R0RSLETT 1985, 1989, HELLSTE\; 2001, 2002, Hill et al. 1998, and NrLSSO\; et al. 1997). The main aim o f this study was to compare the species richness an d abundance o f aquatic macrophytes between regulated and unregulated lakes and distinguish major environmental factors affecting them.

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Minna Kuoppala

Finnish Environment Institute

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Juha Riihimäki

Finnish Environment Institute

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Marit Mjelde

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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Frauke Ecke

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Antti Kanninen

University of Jyväskylä

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Antton Keto

Finnish Environment Institute

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Kari-Matti Vuori

Finnish Environment Institute

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Mika Marttunen

Finnish Environment Institute

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Anne Tarvainen

Finnish Environment Institute

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