1. Prioritising riparian ecotones to sustain and connect multiple biodiversity and functional components in river networks
- Author
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Larsen, Stefano, Alvarez-Martinez, Jose Manuel, Barquin, Jose, Bruno, Maria Cristina, Zubiri, Laura Concostrina, Gallitelli, Luca, Jonsson, Micael, Laux, Monika, Pace, Giorgio, Scalici, Massimiliano, Schulz, Ralf, Larsen, Stefano, Alvarez-Martinez, Jose Manuel, Barquin, Jose, Bruno, Maria Cristina, Zubiri, Laura Concostrina, Gallitelli, Luca, Jonsson, Micael, Laux, Monika, Pace, Giorgio, Scalici, Massimiliano, and Schulz, Ralf
- Abstract
Europe has committed to upscale ecosystems protection to include 30% of land and sea. However, due to historical overexploitation of natural assets, the available area for biodiversity protection is severely limited. Riparian zones are natural ecotones between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, contributing disproportionately to regional biodiversity and providing multiple ecosystem functions and services. Due to this and their branching geometry, riparian networks form a vast system of ‘blue-green arteries’ which physically and functionally connect multiple ecosystems over elevation gradients, despite covering a relatively small area of the basin. Hence, RIPARIANET argues that developing approaches able to optimise the spatial conservation of natural stream-riparian networks represent a flagship example of biodiversity protection in the EU. Although the integrity of riparian zones is fundamental for the achievement of multiple EU environmental objectives, the lack of a standardised framework for biodiversity assessment and protection across Member States has led to extensive impairment of riparian areas and frequent stakeholder conflicts. The main objective of RIPARIANET is to leverage the increasing resolution of remote sensing information to provide practitioners with evidence-based guidance and approaches to biodiversity conservation. Key questions include: i) how can we remotely assess riparian integrity and identify areas which provide effective connectivity allowing species biodiversity and ecosystem functions to persist through meta-ecological processes? ii) how can we disentangle the influence of local- and network-scale stressors and processes on riparian biodiversity to better implement river basin management schemes? iii) to what extent do currently existing protected areas in rivers account for the geometry of riparian networks and their multifunctionality? We will address these questions in riparian networks within six river basins in Europe, includin
- Published
- 2023
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