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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The implementation of the UNESCO demosite at the Guadiana estuary represents an
excellent opportunity to demonstrate how to adapt, mitigate and restore functioning of estuaries and coastal areas impacted by dams and climatic changes, using the Ecohydrology approach. Worldwide estuaries are suffering similar anthropogenic impacts that affect ecosystem functioning, biodiversity and resources. Therefore, the mesocosms experiments at the Guadiana Ecohydrology demosite constitute a collection of case studies, whose results can be used for testing solutions for the sustainable
management of other estuarine systems. We applied the Ecohydrology concepts and
methods to test: a) the usefulness of freshwater inflow pulses to regulate biodiversity and to control microalgal blooms , by regulating nutrient ratios and thus enhancing the bottom-up control of water quality; b) the usefulness of using the feeding ability of bivalve assemblages to control microalgal blooms (top-down control of water quality, and; c) the role of salt marsh plants (Salicornia ramosissima) to reduce excessive concentrations of nutrients and control estuarine water quality. Results show that the interplay between organisms (bivalves, plants) and hydrological factors is a key for improving water quality and sustaining biodiversity and the good ecological status of this estuarine ecosystem.
Description
Keywords
Transitional waters Water Frame Directive Salicornia ramosissima Corbicula fluminea Saltmarshes Plankton
Citation
Chícharo, Luis; Ben Hamadou, Radhouane; Amaral, Ana; Range, Pedro; Mateus, Carmen; Piló, David; Marques, Rute; Morais, Pedro; Alexandra Chícharo, Maria. Application and demonstration of the Ecohydrology approach for the sustainable functioning of the Guadiana estuary (South Portugal), Ecohydrology & Hydrobiology, 9, 1, 55-71, 2009.
Publisher
Elsevier