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Food web restructuring across an urban estuarine gradient.

Ryan J WoodlandLora HarrisErin ReillyAlexandra FiremanEric SchottAndrew Heyes
Published in: Ambio (2021)
Food webs in urban estuaries support valuable ecosystem services that are subject to a wide range of stressors that can degrade the structure of trophic networks. Multiple trophic pathways stabilize food webs by providing complementary diet resources for consumers but the consequences of urbanization on estuarine food webs are relatively unknown. In estuarine creeks across an urban-to-suburban gradient, we demonstrate trophic decoupling of benthic and pelagic pathways, trophic niche contraction, and increasing human health risk arising with the same factors that are associated with ecological degradation. This suggests an urban estuarine paradox-human activities often create larger volumes of deep water habitat, yet human activities also render much of this area unproductive with measurable opportunity costs to food webs. Our findings emphasize the shared consequences of environmental degradation for the ecological integrity of urban estuaries and the health of urban communities that rely on estuaries for sustenance.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • endothelial cells
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • health risk
  • healthcare
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • public health
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • heavy metals
  • primary care
  • physical activity