<p>Coastal reservoirs are viewed in many regions of the world as an emerging concept of storing fresh water when the river basin is in flood. Similar reservoirs (or impoundments) can be used to generate tidal renewable energy and/or provide the catalysis for urban regeneration. Constructed near the
Sustainable Use and Development of Watersheds
✍ Scribed by İ. Ethem Gönenç, Biymyrza Toktoraliev, John P. Wolflin (auth.), İ. Ethem Gönenç, Angheluta Vadineanu, John P. Wolflin, Rosemarie C. Russo (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 520
- Series
- NATO Science for Peace and Security Series
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
John Wesley Powell, U.S. scientist and geographer, put it best when he said that a watershed is: …that area of land, a bounded hydrologic system, within which all living things are inextricably linked by their common water course and where, as humans settled, simple logic demanded that they become part of a community. Watersheds come in all shapes and sizes. They cross sectorial boundaries (e.g. county, state/province, and country). No matter where you are, you are in a watershed! World-wide, watersheds supply drinking water, provide r- reation and respite, and sustain life. Watersheds are rich in natural capital, producing goods (agriculture and fisheries products) and services (industry and technology) for broad geographic areas. In many countries, at the base of watersheds where tributaries empty into large water-bodies (e.g. estuaries, seas, oceans) are centers of society and are typically densely populated areas. These areas serve as concentrated centers of the socio-economic system. They also are centers of domestic and international trade, tourism, and c- merce as well as the center of governments (capitals) where local, regional and national legislatures are located. As we all live in a watershed, our individual actions can directly affect it. The cumulative effects of all the individual actions of everyone within a watershed may be, and often are devastating to the quality of water resources and affect the health of living things including humans. Therefore, watershed systems are highly subject to threat to human security and peace.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Introduction....Pages 3-5
Watershed and Water Management System in Algeria....Pages 9-19
Advances in Managing Austria’s Water Resources....Pages 21-49
Problems and Prospects of Water Resources Management in the Azerbaijan Republic....Pages 51-59
Water Resources Management System of Kyrgyzstan....Pages 61-80
Watershed Management Practices in the Philippines: The Tigum-Aganan Watershed Case....Pages 81-98
Watershed Management System in Poland and Its Implications for Environmental Conditions of the Baltic Sea: An Example of the Vistula River Watershed....Pages 99-111
Watersheds Management in Romania: Challenges and Opportunities....Pages 113-132
Watershed Management in the Russian Federation and Transboundary Issues by Example of Kaliningrad Oblast (Russia)....Pages 133-149
Overview of Water Management in Turkey: Issues, Constraints, Achievements, Prospect....Pages 151-171
Watershed Management in the United States....Pages 173-198
Multilevel Participatory Model for Decision Making on Regional Hydro-System Basis: Serbian Case Study....Pages 201-213
Supporting Tools for Decisional Process within Water Framework Directive: From EU Context to Modelkey Perspective....Pages 215-225
Application of Water Quality Modelling as a Decision Support System Tool for Planned Buyuk Melen Reservoir and Its Watershed....Pages 227-242
The Use of Numerical Modeling in Italian Watershed Management....Pages 243-262
Sustainable Development of Watersheds: Using Sturgeon Species as an Indicator in Integrated Transboundary Water Management in the Ural River Basin....Pages 263-288
Lagoon Ecosystem Study Trough Two Cases: Oualidia (Atlantic) and Nador (Mediterranean) – Morocco....Pages 289-298
Coastal Lagoons in the Context of Water Management in Spain and Europe....Pages 299-321
Water Framework Directive: Defining the Ecological Quality Status in Transitional and Coastal Waters....Pages 323-335
The Role of Ecological Endpoints in Watershed Management....Pages 337-348
Bioidentification of Xenobiotics as a Basis of Water Management....Pages 349-353
GIS Analysis of Sustainable Development Indicators for Coastal Watersheds in the South-East Baltic....Pages 355-368
Combined Use of Watershed Models to Assess the Apportionment of Point and Non Point Load Sources to Surface Waters....Pages 369-383
Development of National Action Plan to Address Pollution from Land Based Activities in Turkey....Pages 385-401
Reduction of the Land-Based Discharges to the Curonian Lagoon in a View of a Climate Change Perspective....Pages 403-413
The Study of Hydro-Mineralogical and Ecological Regime of Kara-Bogaz-Gol Lagoon, Turkmenistan....Pages 415-423
Comparative Analysis of Water Management Practices in Mediterranean Countries....Pages 425-433
Chesapeake Bay Program – A Watershed Approach to Management....Pages 435-451
Decision Support Systems and Tools....Pages 455-481
Land-Based Sources, Water Quality and Management....Pages 483-512
Decision Making, Policy And Financing....Pages 513-527
Back Matter....Pages 529-532
✦ Subjects
Environmental Management; Environmental Monitoring/Analysis; Waste Water Technology / Water Pollution Control / Water Management / Aquatic Pollution; Ecosystems; Ecotoxicology
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