Pepe Barquín

Pepe Barquín
Universidad de Cantabria | UNICAN · Environmental Hydraulics Institute "IH Cantabria"

PhD in Ecology
Associate professor at Universidad de Cantabria and Head of the Continental Ecosystem group at IHCantabria

About

101
Publications
34,915
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
1,942
Citations
Citations since 2017
55 Research Items
1434 Citations
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250300
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250300
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250300
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250300
Introduction
Pepe Barquín currently works at the Environmental Hydraulics Institute "IH Cantabria", Universidad de Cantabria. Pepe does research in Ecology, Limnology and Hydrology.
Additional affiliations
January 2017 - December 2020
Universidad de Cantabria
Position
  • Professor
January 2012 - present
Universidad de Cantabria
Position
  • Ramón & Cajal Researcher
February 2001 - February 2005
Massey University
Position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (101)
Article
Sustaining or restoring riparian quality is essential to achieve and maintain good stream health, as well as to guarantee the ecological functions that natural riparian areas provide. Therefore, quantifying riparian quality is a fundamental step to identify river reaches for conservation and/or restoration purposes. Most of the existing methods ass...
Article
Full-text available
Riparian zone delineation is a central issue for riparian and river ecosystem management, however, criteria used to delineate them are still under debate. The area inundated by a 50-yr flood has been indicated as an optimal hydrological descriptor for riparian areas. This detailed hydrological information is, however, not usually available for enti...
Article
Full-text available
One of the major challenges in river restoration is to identify the natural fluvial landscape in catchments with a long history of river control. Intensive land use on valley floors often predates the earliest remote sensing: levees, dikes, dams, and other structures alter valley-floor morphology, river channels and flow regimes. Consequently, morp...
Article
Full-text available
Spatial patterns in macroinvertebrate communities were examined in 4 to 5 rheocrene springbrooks and 4 to 5 nearby rhithral streams in 4 different regions of New Zealand. Physicochemical attributes of springbrooks and rhithral streams were similar, but springbrooks were more stable. Standing crops of periphyton biomass, epilithic C, and organic mat...
Article
More productive environments typically have more species, although the specific form of this relationship is unclear and can vary with spatial scale. This relationship has received little direct attention in lotic systems, and thus the nature of the relationship is unclear, as is any effect of spatial scale. We examined the link between stream prim...
Article
Full-text available
Rivers and streams have suffered multiple transformations to attend the increasing water demands worldwide. Among these, dams and reservoirs cause some of the most severe ecological impacts on rivers, altering the river flow and thermal regimens, nutrient and sediment fluxes, and network connectivity. However, in the context of the different dam pu...
Article
Full-text available
Freshwater ecosystems are among the most threatened ecosystems on Earth. Effective conservation strategies are essential to reverse this trend and should be based on sound knowledge of biodiversity patterns and the main drivers structuring them. In this study, we investigated the role of environmental and dispersal-connectivity controls on freshwat...
Article
Full-text available
Human activities are not only increasing salinization of rivers, they might also be altering the temporal dynamics of salinity. Here, we assess the effect of human activities on the temporal dynamics of electrical conductivity (EC) in 91 Spanish rivers using daily measures of EC from 2007 to 2011. We expected rivers weakly affected by human activit...
Article
Full-text available
Trends and ecological consequences of phosphorus (P) decline and increasing nitrogen (N) to phosphorus (N:P) ratios in rivers and estuaries are reviewed and discussed. Results suggest that re‐oligotrophication is a dominant trend in rivers and estuaries of high‐income countries in the last two‐three decades, while in low‐income countries widespread...
Article
Full-text available
Identifying and quantifying global change impacts on biotic and abiotic components of ecosystems is critical to promote an effective adaptation that increases the success of conservation strategies. To achieve this goal, global and regional assessment efforts require certain degree of harmonization on local monitoring programs to establish relevant...
Article
El seguimiento de la respuesta espectral obtenida por sensores remotos de media resolución relativo a formaciones vegetales puede proporcionar información muy relevante para el estudio de su distribución y dinámica a lo largo de gradientes ambientales y escalas geográficas. La combinación del ciclo orbital y el ancho de barrido de Sentinel 2 propor...
Article
Full-text available
The alteration of structural connectivity in fluvial networks is important for the genetic dynamics of aquatic species. Exploring the effects of network fragmentation through genetic analysis is crucial to assess the conservation status of riverine species. In this study, we investigated the genetic consequences of the altered connectivity of brown...
Article
Full-text available
This work aims to assess brown trout (Salmo trutta) passage through a free-flow pool-weir-type fishway with hydrodynamic notches and extreme water drops between pools. It consists of an old-school fishway design, commonly constructed in salmon rivers of Spain during the period of 1950–1980. To assess their performance, a field test was designed wit...
Article
Full-text available
Urbanization and agricultural intensification are the main drivers of biodiversity losses through multiple stressors, especially habitat fragmentation, isolation and loss. Designing Blue and Green Infrastructure Networks (BGIN) has been recommended as a potential tool for land-use planning to increase ecosystem services while preserving biodiversit...
Article
Land burning has long been used as an effective means of land management. Used in a controlled manner, the burning of vegetation to clear land can have minimal effects on the natural environment. However, uncontrolled land burning, where fires are allowed to spread beyond the intended area, can have severe and detrimental effects on ecosystem funct...
Article
Humans have severely altered freshwater ecosystems globally, causing a loss of biodiversity. Regulatory frameworks, like the Water Framework Directive, have been developed to support actions that halt and reverse this loss. These frameworks use typology systems that summarize freshwater ecosystems into environmentally delineated types. Within types...
Article
Full-text available
Human activities have caused a significant change in the function and services that ecosystems have provided to society since historical times. In mountainous landscapes, the regulation of services such as water quality or erosion control has been impacted by land use and land cover (LULC) changes, especially the loss and fragmentation of forest pa...
Article
Full-text available
Small rivers support high levels of biodiversity, being especially sensitive to the effects of global change. Temporal records of community composition in minimally impaired streams can be used to explore trends in biodiversity in response to climate change and natural temporal variation. We approached the comparison of two time periods (2003–2008...
Article
Full-text available
River networks are among Earth’s most threatened hot-spots of biodiversity and provide key ecosystem services (e.g., supply drinking water and food, climate regulation) essential to sustaining human well-being. Climate change and increased human water use are causing more rivers and streams to dry, with devastating impacts on biodiversity and ecosy...
Article
Full-text available
Populations of Atlantic salmon are crashing across most of its natural range: understanding the underlying causes and predicting these collapses in time to intervene effectively are urgent ecological and socioeconomic priorities. Current management techniques rely on phenomenological analyses of demographic population time-series and thus lack a me...
Article
Full-text available
Context Afforestation is one of the major drivers of land cover change in the world. In spite of its multiple applications, forest generation has been fostered during the last century to achieve few specific objectives such as timber production or catchment erosion protection. However, new afforestation programs are required to meet multiple object...
Article
Full-text available
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) represents the largest pool of organic carbon in fluvial ecosystems. The majority of DOM in rivers is of terrigenous origin—making DOM composition highly dependent on vegetation cover and soil properties. While deforestation is still a worldwide anthropogenic phenomenon, current land cover change in temperate regions...
Article
Rivers are intensively managed worldwide through unprecedented flow regime alterations on a global scale. This has led to an increasing interest in the development of quantitative tools to assess the ecological response of organisms to flow alteration. To date, studies reflect a large diversity of responses that make the intensity and prevalence of...
Article
Full-text available
Adaptive water management is a promising management paradigm for rivers that addresses the uncertainty of decision consequences. However, its implementation into current practice is still a challenge. An optimization assessment can be framed within the adaptive management cycle allowing the definition of environmental flows (e-flows) in a suitable...
Chapter
Springs are ecosystems influenced by the exposure of groundwater at the Earth's surface. Springs are abundant and have played important, highly interactive ecological, cultural, and socio-economic roles in arid, mesic, and subaqueous environments throughout human evolution and history. However, springs also are widely regarded as being highly threa...
Article
Full-text available
Blue-green infrastructure (BGI) is becoming a more popular means of dealing with climate change and climate change-related events. However, as the concept of BGI is relatively new, many urban and rural planners are unfamiliar with the barriers they may face during the lifecycle of a BGI project. As a result, some have been hesitant to adopt BGI sol...
Article
Digital soil mapping (DSM) is an effective mapping technique that supports the increased need for quantitative soil data. In DSM, soil properties are correlated to environmental characteristics using statistical models like regression. However, many of these relationships are explicitly described in mechanistic simulation models. Therefore, the mec...
Article
Changes in land cover are one of the most extensive and influential human impacts on fluvial ecosystems. In this study, we assessed how changes in food resource quantity and type linked to forest cover affect mountain stream multitrophic macroinvertebrate community size structure. We tested whether the total organism biomass (size spectrum intercep...
Article
Full-text available
Conservation and sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems is a priority in environmental programs worldwide. However, these aims are highly dependent on the efficiency, accuracy and cost of existent methods for the detection of keystone species and monitoring of biological communities. Rapid advances in eDNA, barcoding and metabarcoding promote...
Chapter
Full-text available
Los recursos hídricos constituyen un componente clave del capital natural y el bienestar de los habitantes del Uruguay. Su administración y cuidado en un contexto de intensificación productiva presenta importantes desafíos para el ámbito de la gestión ambiental. El país navega actualmente una transición desde un modelo fragmentado de gestión de los...
Research
Full-text available
Artículo publicado en el Boletín de la Red de Seguimiento del Cambio global en Parques nacionales Nº7 donde presentamos la Red de Seguimiento del cambio global en los ecosistemas acuáticos del Parque Nacional de los Picos de Europa. Desde el año 2012 el Instituto de Hidráulica Ambiental de la Universidad de Cantabria (IHCantabria) ha implementado y...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Over a decade after the publication of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment an increasing number of ES modeling applications from local to global scales have been created. ALICE, Improving the management of Atlantic Landscapes: aCcounting for bIodiversity and eCosystem sErvices,is a project that will develop a comprehensive package of new methods, t...
Presentation
Full-text available
Over a decade after the publication of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment an increasing number of ES modeling applications from local to global scales have been created. ALICE, Improving the management of Atlantic Landscapes: aCcounting for bIodiversity and eCosystem sErvices,is a project that will develop a comprehensive package of new methods, t...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Engaging communities into ecosystem services – Valuing Blue and Green Infrastructures in Atlantic landscapes Vanessa Queirós1, João Cabral1,2, André Fonseca1,2, Martinho Lourenço1, Simone Varandas1,2, João Santos1,2, José Aranha1,2, Mário Santos1,2, Sandra M. Monteiro1,2, Rui Cortes1,2, Luis F. Fernandes1,2, Fernando Pacheco1, João Paulo Moura1,2,...
Article
Full-text available
Developing a methodology to map the distribution of riparian forests to entire river networks and determining the main environmental factors controlling their spatial patterns. Cantabrian region, northern Spain. We mapped the riparian forests at a physiognomic and phytosociological levels by delimiting riparian zones and generating vegetation distr...
Article
Network connectivity is a key feature of rivers that affects patterns and processes in lotic ecosystems. Few studies have considered how changes in river reach connectivity might affect ecosystem attributes at a whole river network scale. The use of population dynamics models of keystone species at a river network scale allows exploration of how th...
Article
Understanding how different food resources sustain stream food webs is fundamental towards increasing our knowledge on trophic structure and energy flow pathways in fluvial ecosystems. Food webs in small mountain streams are sustained by autochthonous (instream primary production) and allochthonous (inputs from the terrestrial ecosystem) organic re...
Article
Full-text available
River ecosystem metabolism (REM) is a promising cost-effective measure of ecosystem functioning, as it integrates many different ecosystem processes and is affected by both rapid (primary productivity) and slow (organic matter decomposition) energy channels of the riverine food web. We estimated REM in 41 river reaches in Deva-Cares catchment (nort...
Article
Full-text available
• Freshwater ecosystems generally lack adequate protection. In this regard, defining clear and objective conservation criteria through public participation is extremely important, as it can greatly enhance the feasibility of the conservation plans by building credibility, salience, and legitimacy. • This article presents an exercise of systematic f...
Article
Nowadays, alteration of the natural flow regime is considered one the most widespread and damaging impacts for river ecosystems. Hence, increasing our understanding of large-scale hydrological alteration patterns would help us design more effective water use policies. The present study aims to establish general patterns of hydrological alteration c...
Article
The physical characteristics of river habitats constitute the setting in which fluvial biota dwell and thrive. Determining the spatial and temporal patterns of physical habitat characteristics and the main factors that control them is extremely important to increase the efficiency of river management, conservation, and restoration. This study deter...
Presentation
Full-text available
ALICE, Improving the management of Atlantic Landscapes: accouting for bIodiversity and eCosystem sErvices,will develop a comprehensive package of new methods, tools and procedures to identify barriers to the delivery of benefits from Blue and Green Infrastructures (BGI) implementation and to improve the characterization of biodiversity and the valu...
Article
Full-text available
Current biomonitoring approaches are widely used but have some limitations. • DNA metabarcoding provides a new complementary tool for biomonitoring. • Metabarcoding allows extending the range of taxa used as bioindicators. • Metabarcoding data could be used to establish molecular metrics and indices. • Future work should standardise procedures and...
Article
Supervised classification converts digital data of satellite imagery into categorical land-cover classes suitable for end users. Far away from being an easy process, many factors such as landscape heterogeneity and topography cause radiometric exchange among classes that needs to be filtered out prior quantitative applications. To address this prob...
Article
The Cordillera Cantábrica (CC) presents a series of singularities that make this area an excellent place for monitoring the effects of global change. This study analyses the need to generate an interregional observatory of global change, which would integrate current knowledge about these mountains and help setting priorities in the generation of n...
Article
This study aims to clarify the influence of forests, as well as other prevalent land cover types, on extreme hydrological events through a land cover gradient design. We selected 10 catchments within a gradient of forest land cover, in which there were 15 years of simultaneous daily hydrological and meteorological data, and an additional forest des...
Article
Full-text available
Predicting the natural flow regime in ungauged rivers is an important challenge in water resource management and ecological research. We developed models to predict 16 hydrological indices in a river network covering the northern third of the Iberian Peninsula. Multiple Linear Regression (MLR), Generalized Additive Models (GAMs), Random Forest (RF)...
Article
Sewage inputs on fluvial ecosystems affect benthic communities and alter trophic networks resulting in changes on river functioning. Functional indicators (e.g. river metabolism) have been proposed as a valuable tool to evaluate ecosystem impairment. In the present study we monitored river metabolism in spring (few days after a major flood) and in...
Article
Hydrological variability over seasonal and multi-annual timescales strongly shapes the ecological structure and functioning of floodplain ecosystems. The current IPCC climate scenario foresees an increase in the frequency of extreme events. This, in conjunction with other anthropogenic disturbances (e.g., river regulation or land-use changes) poses...
Article
A current challenge of biodiversity and conservation is the estimation of the spatial extent of habitat types across broad territories. In the absence of fine-resolution maps, predictive modelling helps in assessing the spatial distribution of vegetation cover. However, such approaches are still uncommon in regional planning and management. Here, w...
Article
Full-text available
Community assembly is determined by a combination of historical events and contemporary processes that are difficult to disentangle, but eco-evolutionary mechanisms may be uncovered by the joint analysis of species and genetic diversity across multiple sites. Mountain streams across Europe harbour highly diverse macroinvertebrate communities whose...
Article
Full-text available
Knowledge of the spatial distribution of temporary and perennial river channels in a whole catchment is important for effective integrated basin management and river biodiversity conservation. However, this information is usually not available or is incomplete. In this study, we present a statistically-based methodology to classify river segments f...
Article
Full-text available
The EU Water Framework Directive aims to ensure restoration of Europe’s water bodies to “good ecological status” by 2027. Many Member States will struggle to meet this target, with around half of EU river catchments currently reporting below standard water quality. Diffuse pollution from agriculture represents a major pressure, affecting over 90% o...
Article
Mountain streams play a key role in the conservation of aquatic biodiversity and key ecosystem services; however human activities are threatening these ecosystems as mountain areas become more and more developed and intensively used. Many of these streams are not considered in current national monitoring programs due to their small catchment area....
Article
We modelled three macroinvertebrate (IASPT, EPT number of families and LIFE) and one fish (percentage of salmonid biomass) biotic indices to river networks draining a large region (110,000 km2) placed in Northern and Eastern Spain. Models were developed using Random Forest and 26 predictor variables (19 predictors to model macroinvertebrate indices...
Preprint
Full-text available
Land cover and soil properties largely determine how climatic and hydrological regimes interact and produce hydrological stress in aquatic ecosystems. This study aims to clarify the influence of forests, as well as other majoritarian land cover types, on hydrological regime through an experimental design without the main limitations associated with...
Article
Full-text available
Free-floating plants are important components of aquatic ecosystems in tropical climates, playing a key role in the structure and spatial distribution of fish communities. This study aims at elucidating the potential effects of free-floating vegetation on fish community structure in a tropical floodplain lake, using an experimental approach based o...
Article
Full-text available
Modern land-use planning and conservation strategies at landscape to country scales worldwide require complete and accurate digital representations of river networks, encompassing all channels including the smallest headwaters. The digital river networks, integrated with widely available digital elevation models, also need to have analytical capabi...
Article
Full-text available
Species distribution models and consensus models allow knowing the distribution of species in large areas where there is no field data and identifying the most important drivers for those distributions. In this study, seven individual models were used to obtain a consensus model to determine the potential distribution for six freshwater fish specie...