The Birmingham Urban Ecohydrological Observatory – Multi-stressor interactions and their impacts of ecohydrological functioning

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Updated: 15/12/2025
The Birmingham Urban Ecohydrological Observatory – Multi-stressor interactions and their impacts of ecohydrological functioning

Project Overview

Urban headwater catchments with mixed land use and multi-stressor impacts. | Modified urban streams (e.g., River Rea, Bournbrook) under pollution and hydrological pressures. | Enhanced: Waste-water treatment, extreme event moderation, and habitat provision are improved through wetland restoration, green infrastructure, and pollution mitigation. Maintained: Recreation and education via community engagement.

Conserve Process NO
Enhance Process YES
Apply Complementary YES

Ecosystem Services

Provisioning

  • Provisioning Services are ecosystem services that describe the material or energy outputs from ecosystems. They include food, water and other resources.

Regulating

  • Regulating Services are the services that ecosystems provide by acting as regulators eg. regulating the quality of air and soil or by providing flood and disease control.
  • Waste-water treatment: Ecosystems such as wetlands filter both human and animal waste and act as a natural buffer to the surrounding environment. Through the biological activity of microorganisms in the soil, most waste is broken down. Thereby pathogens (disease causing microbes) are eliminated, and the level of nutrients and pollution is reduced.

Habitat / Supporting

  • Ecosystem services "that are necessary for the production of all other ecosystem services". These include services such as nutrient recycling, primary production and soil formation.
  • Habitats for species: Habitats provide everything that an individual plant or animal needs to survive: food; water; and shelter. Each ecosystem provides different habitats that can be essential for a species’ lifecycle. Migratory species including birds, fish, mammals and insects all depend upon different ecosystems during their movements.

Cultural

  • Cultural Services corresponds nonmaterial benefits people obtain from ecosystems through spiritual enrichment, cognitive development, reflection, recreation, and aesthetic experiences.
  • Recreation and mental and physical health: Walking and playing sports in green space is not only a good form of physical exercise but also lets people relax. The role that green space plays in maintaining mental and physical health is increasingly being recognized, despite difficulties of measurement.

Major Issues

Pollutants and Nutrients: Legacy industrial contaminants and

Pollutants and Nutrients: Legacy industrial contaminants and emerging pollutants from sewage and runoff degrade water quality and harm aquatic ecosystems

Intensive land use: High urbanization and agricultural

Intensive land use: High urbanization and agricultural pressures increase impervious surfaces and pollution loads, reducing natural infiltration and habitat quality

Floods: Increasing frequency and severity of urban

Floods: Increasing frequency and severity of urban flooding, driven by climate change and land use, cause property damage and mobilize stored pollutants

Invasive Species: Species like Himalayan Balsam and

Invasive Species: Species like Himalayan Balsam and signal crayfish outcompete native flora and fauna, disrupting ecological balance

Droughts: Extended dry periods lead to critical

Droughts: Extended dry periods lead to critical low flows, causing hypoxia and concentrating pollutants, stressing aquatic life

Habitat Loss: Historical channel modification and urbanization

Habitat Loss: Historical channel modification and urbanization have homogenized river habitats, reducing biodiversity and ecosystem resilience

EH Engineering Solutions

Community lead initiatives have been leading on

Community lead initiatives have been leading on green infrastructure improvements. This includes wetlands restoration and re-greening as part of WWT work. Private estates have been replanting riparian buffers to mitigate flooding. Additionally, the removal of old industrial infrastructure has been undertaken, including older weirs, and hard engineered banks.

The Observatory is fortunate to be home

The Observatory is fortunate to be home to researchers advancing Faunatechnology that uses waterfleas, namely the Daphnia genus to clean up waste. A focus on this is surrounding WWTP, with initiatives lead by Prof Luisa Orsini. These solutions are being tested in isolation on rivers but are not widely released until more monitoring is completed to understand and further impacts.

The Birmingham Urban Observatory rivers have undergone

The Birmingham Urban Observatory rivers have undergone much legacy contamination and emerging. Phytostablisation has been a focus on rivers such as the Rea that has increased legacy contamination from heavy industry. Re-greening river banks has been used to trap and stop the contamination spread. Further work still needs to be done in other areas of phytotechnology.

Whilst this is not deemed as Whilst

Whilst this is not deemed as Whilst this is not deemed that hydrological flow is an issue for the catchment, abstraction reforms are in place to ensure no pressure is created. Environmental flow is being improved where possible through removal of older concrete infrastructure left over from the industrial era in Birmingham.

Project Activities

  • High-frequency sensor monitoring of hydrology and water quality
  • Citizen science projects for invasive species monitoring and data collection
  • Ecological engineering including wetland restoration and riparian buffer creation
  • Research on emerging contaminants like microplastics and tyre wear particles
  • Community engagement and school outreach programs
  • Removal of invasive species and obsolete infrastructure like weirs
  • Storm event analysis to understand pollution triggers and transport

Expected Outcomes

Develop high-resolution understanding of urban ecohydrological processes | Create new sensors and tools for pollution diagnosis and prediction | Enhance river health and biodiversity through targeted restoration | Increase community engagement and stewardship via citizen science | Improve resilience to floods, droughts, and pollution pressures | Disseminate findings through publications, outreach, and international networks

Latest Results

High-frequency data revealed storm-driven nutrient and DOM dynamics (Khamis et al., 2021 | Zhu et al., 2024) | Microplastic sampling showed high temporal variability, informing monitoring strategies (Kukkola et al., 2024) | Weir removals and wetland restoration enhanced habitat and flow | Over 200 community members engaged in citizen science

Social-Ecological System

Integrated view of principles, objectives, stakeholders and methodology.

Ecohydrology Principles and Solutions

Hydrological Quantification
  • Quantification of the hydrological processes at catchment scale and mapping the impacts | Distribution of ecosystems and their relevant processes (ex: metabolism=water and nutrient uptake and retention; biomass production) | Ecological engineering (integration, dual regulation and biotechnologies in catchment scale for enhancement of ecological potential)
Ecological Identification
Ecological Engineering & Nature-based Solutions
  • Community lead initiatives have been leading on green infrastructure improvements. This includes wetlands restoration and re-greening as part of WWT work. Private estates have been replanting riparian buffers to mitigate flooding. Additionally, the removal of old industrial infrastructure has been undertaken, including older weirs, and hard engineered banks. | The Observatory is fortunate to be home to researchers advancing Faunatechnology that uses waterfleas, namely the Daphnia genus to clean up waste. A focus on this is surrounding WWTP, with initiatives lead by Prof Luisa Orsini. These solutions are being tested in isolation on rivers but are not widely released until more monitoring is completed to understand and further impacts. | The Birmingham Urban Observatory rivers have undergone much legacy contamination and emerging. Phytostablisation has been a focus on rivers such as the Rea that has increased legacy contamination from heavy industry. Re-greening river banks has been used to trap and stop the contamination spread. Further work still needs to be done in other areas of phytotechnology. | Whilst this is not deemed as Whilst this is not deemed that hydrological flow is an issue for the catchment, abstraction reforms are in place to ensure no pressure is created. Environmental flow is being improved where possible through removal of older concrete infrastructure left over from the industrial era in Birmingham.

Objectives

EH Objectives
Water 5/5
Biodiversity 4/5
Services 4/5
Resilience 5/5
Cultural Heritage 2/5
Project Objectives
  • Understand multi-stressor interactions on urban ecohydrology Develop and test novel sensors and monitoring tools Enhance ecosystem services and resilience through restoration Foster community engagement and citizen science

Key Stakeholders

University of Birmingham Environment Agency Birmingham City Council Severn Trent Water Birmingham and Black Country Wildlife Trust Warwickshire Wildlife Trust Birmingham River Champions Canal and Rivers Trust RS Hydro Birmingham Open Spaces Forum Freshwater Biological Association River Cole Community Commons

Methodology

  • The methodology integrates high-frequency sensor monitoring with ecological engineering
  • It applies dual regulation by managing biota to control hydrology and vice versa
  • It employs phytotechnologies and community-based restoration to enhance natural attenuation and ecosystem resilience