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Incorporating ecological perspectives in European groundwater management policy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2005

DAN L. DANIELOPOL
Affiliation:
Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Limnology, A-5310 Mondsee, Austria
JANINE GIBERT
Affiliation:
University of Lyon, Groundwater Hydrobiology and Ecology Laboratory, F-69622 Villeurbanne, France
CHRISTIAN GRIEBLER
Affiliation:
Research Center for Environment and Health (GSF), Institute of Groundwater Ecology, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany
AMARA GUNATILAKA
Affiliation:
Verbundplan GmbH and University of Vienna, Institute of Medical Biology, Laboratory of Ecophysiology and Ecotoxicology, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
HANS JÜRGEN HAHN
Affiliation:
University of Koblenz-Landau, Campus Landau, Division of Biology, D-76829 Landau, Germany
GIUSEPPE MESSANA
Affiliation:
Institute for the Study of Ecosystems, CNR – ISE, Section Florence, I-50019 Sesto Fiorentino, Italy
JOS NOTENBOOM
Affiliation:
National Institute of Public Health and Environment, NL-3720BA Bilthoven, the Netherlands
BORIS SKET
Affiliation:
University of Ljubljana, Department of Biology, Si-1001 Ljubljana, Slovenia

Abstract

Implementation of the European Union (EU) Water Framework Directive (WFD 2000) and its planned supplement ‘Directive on the Protection of Groundwater against Pollution’ (EU GWD [European Union Groundwater Directive] 2003) demands an initial characterization of all groundwater bodies by national and regional authorities. The main criteria considered in the Directives to define the groundwater (GW) status are quality (chemical) and quantity, but there is the obvious omission of ecological perspective in these. A directive for a comprehensive policy dealing with GW protection at the level of the EU is a prerequisite for human welfare. Additionally, recognition of GW-dependent ecosystems (GDEs) in the EU is equally important for their sustainable management. GW management and policy should recognize the ecological functions of GW and their interactions with GDEs. As they can stretch across national and regional boundaries, political recognition of their importance and the necessity for ecological consistency of management plans have to be emphasized. During the last three decades, a number of researchers have focused their attention on the dynamics and functioning of GW ecosystems and this work could serve as a basis for identifying impacts of changes in key attributes of GDEs. Detailed aspects of GW ecosystems have been comprehensively dealt with (Gibert et al. 1994; Wilkens et al. 2000; Griebler et al. 2001; Danielopol et al. 2003). Changes in key attributes of GW ecosystems have had consequences for the environment in the EU and USA (Klijn & Witte 1999; Winter 1999; Sophocleous 2002; Winter et al. 2003).

Type
Comment
Copyright
© 2004 Foundation for Environmental Conservation

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