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Towards an ecological assessment of watercourses
A. Schneiders1,
E. Verhaert2 G. D. Blust3,
C. Wils1, L. Bervoets1
& R.F. Verheyen1
1Department of
Biology, University of Antwerp, U.LA., Universiteitsplein
1, 8-2610 Wilrijk, Belgium
2Flemish Land Improvement
Authority, Cardijnlaan 1, 8-2200 Herentals, Belgium
3lnstitute of Nature Conservation,
Kiewitdreef 5, 8-3500 Hasselt, Belgium
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Abstract
Due to a fast decline in the ecological quality of
watercourses combined with the threat of human functions, policy
makers started to legislate water quality objectives for watercourses
and to set up water purification programs. The description of universal
quality objectives is too limited as a frame of reference and a
policy only based on water quality cannot guarantee the goals of
river restoration as a whole. In most countries the need for a more
integrated approach of water management is growing. Water quantity
must be managed together with water quality, surface water with
groundwater, and the water economy with town and country planning.
To restore and maintain the natural diversity of watercourses,
together with the natural species richness, policy makers need a
frame of reference based on the natural functioning of the ecosystem.
The highest level of reference is called the ecological naturalness'.
Based on the present and the potential ecological value and on the
intensity of human uses, policy makers together with a group of
scientists should decide on the ecological quality objectives of
watercourses. The lowest quality level that must be reached in all
watercourses can be described as the 'ecological basic quality'.
Together with a frame of reference, there is a need for a refined
ecological evaluation method for ecological quality as a whole,
and especially to evaluate 'potential ecological values' in an objective
way.
Keywords: Water quality goals, river restoration, integrated
water management, ecological evaluation
methods
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