Abstract:
The present state of environmental decision-making is
often based on short-term analysis of an individual
component of the system, and interpretation made on the
basis of some set of general evaluation criteria, which
ignore site and pollutant-specificity. The ecosystem health
analysis, therefore, requires identification of a systematic
set of relationships which provide the basis for ecosystem
health assessment. Moreover, the issues of biodiversity have
multifarious dimensions which need to be analysed
appropriately in the context of several environmental
parameters sQ«& that meaningful assessment and
interpretation of cause-effect relationships emerge
facilitating pragmatic planning of terrestrial ecosystems.
The present study, therefore, aims at development of
suitable methodologies for appropriate analysis of the
select ecosystems with reference to vegetation and their
tolerance characteristics, in order to evaluate the impacts,
and offer measures for biodiversity conservation and
management.
As evident, biotic community plays a vital role in
ecological sanitation by assimilating various pollutants
through tissue uptake, accumulation, metabolism and
physiological biodegradation. Moreover, green plants not
only serve as sinks/air purifiers/assimilators of the air
pollutants, but are also the primary producers, because of
their photosynthetic capacity, and form the first baseline
A
organisms for the attack, deposition and assimilation of the
pollution. Though plant-environment interactions have been
explored, and the mechanisms responsible for the impacts
have been well investigated/documented, very little is known
about the effects of various interacting stresses due to
pollutant impacts, and the management strategies in
combination.
A substantial body of research is directed towards
understanding the impacts of gaseous pollutants on the
vegetation. As a primary pathway for the exchange of gases
between internal leaf surfaces and the atmosphere, stomates
play an important regulatory role in the leaf physiological
processes. It has always been assumed that adsorption into
the leaves through the outer layer and the stomata of the
leaves play the sole role in the elimination of the
pollutants by the plants. The environmental alterations due
to the population explosion since the past century have
imposed physiological stresses, which make stomatal action a
potentially important mechanism for protection against
damage due to the pollutants, and thus an important criteria
to be incorporated in studies related to ecosystem health
assessment.
In the present study species diversity has been used in
order to identify the most important species representing
different ecosystem communities investigated. Ecosystem
Health Analysis has been carried out on the basis of various
diversity indices and their incorporation in the ecosystemprocess-
based Assimilative Capacity Model (ACM)
Assimilative Capacity Model as a modified version of the
earlier developed Ecosystem-Health-Exposure-Risk Model has
been applied for quantifying assimilative capacities of the
studied ecosystems. This has enabled delineation of
pragmatic and ecosystem-specific biodiversity management
plans.