SOCIETY INFO
CONFERENCES
JOURNAL
ECOVISION BOOKS
SEARCH
CONTACT
MEMBERSHIP
HOME
  Journal > Table of Contents > Volume 9 Issue 1 > Abstract
 


Cumulative effects assessment of bay ecosystem: Xiamen’s Western Sea, a case study

Xiai Yang1, Xiongzhi Xue2*, and Shawn S. Shen3

1Xiamen Environmental Monitoring Centre, 361005, Xiamen, China
2Key Laboratory for Marine Environmental Science of Ministry of Education, Environmental Science Research Centre, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China
3Department of International Development Studies, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, B3H 3C, Canada

*Corresponding author: Fax: +86-592-2181875, E-mail: xzxue@xmu.edu.cn

Abstract

   Considering the deficiency of conventional environment impacts assessment to protect bay ecosystems from unfavourable impacts of multiple human activities over the years, this paper discusses an effective approach framework to examine addictive or interactive impacts arising from the collective multiple activities of the past. There are three stages of the cumulative effects assessment process: 1) systematically selecting indicators of the ecosystem in question, 2) choosing the quantified or semi-quantified methods to assess indicators of changes, and 3) assessing the past contributions of the activities to the changes.
In a case study of Xiamen’s Western Sea in China, the indicators were constructed according to their sensitivities to environmental stress and classified into three categories: physical, chemical and biological indicators. The Geography Information System and Pearson correlation analysis were applied to assess changes of the physical and chemical indicators. The case study showed that most of the indicators of Xiamen’s Western Sea ecosystem have been changed greatly in the past five decades, especially in shoreline, sea area, water quality, community construction of phytoplankton and benthos, and mangrove forests. Coastal and dike constructions and terrestrial pollutant input are the main causes of the changes.

 

 

| SOCIETY INFO | CONFERENCE HISTORY| JOURNAL | ECOVISION BOOKS |

| SEARCH | CONTACT | MEMBERSHIP | HOME |