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Conservation by restoration: the management concept for a river-floodplain system on the Danube River in Austria

✍ Scribed by K. Tockner; F. Schiemer; J.V. Ward


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
424 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
1052-7613

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✦ Synopsis


  1. One of the last remnants of a functional alluvial landscape on the Danube extends from Vienna to the Slovakian frontier. It is recognized as an ecosystem extremely worthy of protection and therefore has been designated as a National Park ('Alluvial Zone National Park').

  2. However, surface connectivity has been reduced and floodplain habits have been fragmented. At present, lateral exchange processes of matter are restricted to short-term flood pulses, while most of the year backwater processes are de-coupled from the river system.

  3. A very high species diversity is recorded for this section, with a high proportion of endangered species in all groups, ranging from 16% for riparian vascular plants to 100% for amphibians and reptiles. High diversity is mainly a result of the remaining spatial array of water bodies of different age across the river-floodplain complex (between-channel diversity).

  4. A successful conservation strategy for this floodplain area requires a management scheme based on a solid conceptual foundation of the key processes in river-floodplain systems. Re-establishing hydrological dynamics is recognized as the most vital step, because other processes are influenced by the flow regime and resulting connectivity. Therefore, a large-scale pilot project has been developed for a segment of the free-flowing section to restore gradually the hydrological connectivity between the river and its floodplain.

  5. The side-arm system will be reconnected to the main channel by lowering parts of the riverside embankments. After implementation, the side-arm system will be integrated with the flow regime of the river for more than half of an average year (at present: B 8 days per year).

  6. A key challenge in the evaluation of the effects of restoration is the development and testing of an appropriate monitoring scheme, which has to include a wide range of physical, chemical, geomorphic, and ecological parameters.


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