Managing the effects of multiple stressors on aquatic ecosystems under water scarcity: the GLOBAQUA project

Water scarcity is a serious environmental problem in many European regions, and will likely increase in the near future as a consequence of increased abstraction and climate change. Water scarcity exacerbates the effects of multiple stressors, and thus results in decreased water quality. It impacts...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Navarro-Ortega, Alícia, Acuña, Vicenç, Bellin, Alberto, Burek, Peter, Cassiani, Giorgio, Choukr-Allah, Redouane, Dolédec, Sylvain, Elosegi, Arturo, Ferrari, Federico, Ginebreda, Antoni, Grathwohl, Peter, Jones, Colin, Rault, Philippe Ker, Kok, Kasper, Koundouri, Phoebe, Ludwig, Ralf Peter, Merz, Ralf, Milacic, Radmila, Muñoz Gràcia, Isabel, Nikulin, Grigory, Paniconi, Claudio, Paunović, Momir, Petrović, Mira, Sabater Liesa, Laia, Sabater, Sergi, Skoulikidis, Nikolaos, Slob, Adriaan, Teutsch, Georg, Voulvoulis, Nikolaos, Barceló i Cullerés, Damià
Formato: artículo
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2015
País:España
Recursos:Varias* (Consorci de Biblioteques Universitáries de Catalunya, Centre de Serveis Científics i Acadèmics de Catalunya)
Repositorio:Recercat. Dipósit de la Recerca de Catalunya
OAI Identifier:oai:recercat.cat:10256/12449
Acesso em linha:http://hdl.handle.net/10256/12449
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Ecologia d'aigua dolça
Freshwater ecology
Ecologia fluvial
Stream ecology
Aigua -- Qualitat
Water quality
Descrição
Resumo:Water scarcity is a serious environmental problem in many European regions, and will likely increase in the near future as a consequence of increased abstraction and climate change. Water scarcity exacerbates the effects of multiple stressors, and thus results in decreased water quality. It impacts river ecosystems, threatens the services they provide, and it will force managers and policy-makers to change their current practices. The EU-FP7 project GLOBAQUA aims at identifying the prevalence, interaction and linkages between stressors, and to assess their effects on the chemical and ecological status of freshwater ecosystems in order to improve water management practice and policies. GLOBAQUA assembles a multidisciplinary team of 21 European plus 2 non-European scientific institutions, as well as water authorities and river basin managers. The project includes experts in hydrology, chemistry, biology, geomorphology, modelling, socio-economics, governance science, knowledge brokerage, and policy advocacy. GLOBAQUA studies six river basins (Ebro, Adige, Sava, Evrotas, Anglian and Souss Massa) affected by water scarcity, and aims to answer the following questions: how does water scarcity interact with other existing stressors in the study river basins? How will these interactions change according to the different scenarios of future global change? Which will be the foreseeable consequences for river ecosystems? How will these in turn affect the services the ecosystems provide? How should management and policies be adapted to minimise the ecological, economic and societal consequences? These questions will be approached by combining data-mining, field- and laboratory-based research, and modelling. Here, we outline the general structure of the project and the activities to be conducted within the fourteen work-packages of GLOBAQUA