Condition - Habitat Removal

Physical-chemical state

Direct habitat removal from a wetland can affect:

  • Wetland habitat extent

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This stressor relates to human activities that directly remove areas of habitat or that disturb or damage habitat areas. Habitat can be divided into four zones:

  1. The in-water habitat which may or may not be present and includes the water body itself as well as logs, submerged vegetation and the benthic substrate (rocks, pebbles, mud, peat, etc.).
  2. The wetland dependent zone which is the area of habitat that has been mapped as a wetland dependent regional ecosystem but is not mapped as a water body. This zone will be under water, or at least water-logged, for some period of time.
  3. A fringing zone which is a 100m wide strip around the wetland.
  4. The surface water catchment (i.e. any rain falling in this zone has the potential to enter the wetland).
Physical-chemical state indicators
Condition indicator: change in wetland habitat extent

Biological impact

Changes to wetland habitat extent can result in:

  • A loss of sensitive species

The primary impact of habitat removal is exactly that, the loss of habitat which is of itself undesirable. In addition, there are numerous other potential secondary impacts of habitat loss which include; erosion, sediment deposition, poor water quality (particularly turbidity), loss of habitat-dependent species, loss of connectivity and a loss in visual amenity.

Biological impact indicators
Currently under investigation

Last updated: 21 February 2012

Queensland Government
WetlandInfo   —   Department of Environment and Resource Management

                 

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