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Freshwater biodiversity: An outlook of objectives, achievements,
research fields, and co-operation
Péter Bíró
Balaton Limnological Research Institute
of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 118237 Tihany, Hungary
E-mail: BIRO@
TRES.ELKLHU
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Abstract
This paper reviews the issue of freshwater biodiversity,
from the time of its introduction on national and international
bases. The project was initiated in co-operation by the International
Union of Biological Sciences, the International Society of Limnology
Working Group on Biodiversity in Freshwater Ecosystems and the Hydrobiological
Committee of Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The first International
Union of Biological Sciences International Workshop on Freshwater
Biodiversity was convened at Balatonfured, Hungary during 25-28
August 1996. A framework was developed and a wide scale project,
BIODIVERSITAS, was worked out by Prof. Hiroya Kawanabe and Dr. Christian
Lévesque. This project became one of the main issues of the
International Union and has been incorporated into the activities
of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
Several national and international meetings have been held dealing
with particular fields in relation to species richness of aquatic
ecosystems so that the topic has became a broad scientific, social,
popular, political and economic issue. Scientific questions already
cover nearly all aspects of biodiversity, for example, how to measure
indices, and how to manage and preserve species richness in the
most endangered aquatic habitats. Inventorying, monitoring and conservation
of biodiversity in freshwater are of vital importance. All freshwater
plant and animal species (invertebrates and vertebrates) are more
or less threatened by human activities. Any decrease in diversity
of aquatic species may indicate harmful human impacts, and whenever
these activities increase, the living world of rivers, lakes and
reservoirs is degraded. The rehabilitation of degraded aquatic systems
has been a major limnological issue all over the world.
Freshwater biodiversity is studied in all types of habitats:
lakes, reservoirs, rivers and wetlands and includes species from
bacteria to aquatic vertebrates, and focuses on functional aspects
and habitat differences (lake shores/ecotones, open waters and benthic
habitats). Research on freshwater biodiversity can best be organized
according to selected water bodies on different continents.
The 'status quo' of freshwater stocks is of crucial
importance on local, regional and global scales. A crucial point
is the high-level training of specialists and improving public relations
in order to make communities understand all aspects concerning ecological
crises (e.g., habitat and biodiversity erosion and their consequences
on nature and human beings). However, special interest must also
be afforded to soil and sediment biodiversity, microbial biodiversity,
human dimensions and genetic diversity in both land and aquatic
systems.
Keywords: human impacts, habitats, foodwebs, human dimensions
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