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Multifunctional floodplain management and biodiversity effects: a knowledge synthesis for six European countries
Authors:Stefan Schindler  Fionnuala H. O’Neill  Marianna Biró  Christian Damm  Viktor Gasso  Robert Kanka  Theo van der Sluis  Andreas Krug  Sophie G. Lauwaars  Zita Sebesvari  Martin Pusch  Boris Baranovsky  Thomas Ehlert  Bernd Neukirchen  James R. Martin  Katrin Euller  Volker Mauerhofer  Thomas Wrbka
Affiliation:1.Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, Division of Conservation Biology, Vegetation Ecology and Landscape Ecology,University of Vienna,Vienna,Austria;2.Department of Biodiversity and Nature Conservation,Environment Agency Austria,Vienna,Austria;3.Botanical Environmental & Conservation Consultants Ltd.,Dublin,Ireland;4.Institute of Ecology and Botany, Centre for Ecological Research,Hungarian Academy of Sciences,Vácrátót,Hungary;5.Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),Karlsruhe,Germany;6.Oles Honchar Dnipropetrovsk National University,Dnipropetrovsk,Ukraine;7.Institute of Landscape Ecology SAS,Bratislava,Slovakia;8.Alterra,Wageningen,The Netherlands;9.Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (BfN),Bonn,Germany;10.Rijkswaterstaat Centre for Infrastructure,Utrecht,The Netherlands;11.Institute for Environment and Human Security,United Nations University,Bonn,Germany;12.Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB),Berlin,Germany;13.Gloria Project, Institute for Interdisciplinary Mountain Research, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna,Austrian Academy of Sciences,Vienna,Austria;14.Institute of Advanced Studies,United Nations University,Yokohama,Japan
Abstract:Floodplain ecosystems are biodiversity hotspots and supply multiple ecosystem services. At the same time they are often prone to human pressures that increasingly impact their intactness. Multifunctional floodplain management can be defined as a management approach aimed at a balanced supply of multiple ecosystem services that serve the needs of the local residents, but also those of off-site populations that are directly or indirectly impacted by floodplain management and policies. Multifunctional floodplain management has been recently proposed as a key concept to reconcile biodiversity and ecosystem services with the various human pressures and their driving forces. In this paper we present biophysics and management history of floodplains and review recent multifunctional management approaches and evidence for their biodiversity effects for the six European countries Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Slovakia, Hungary and the Ukraine. Multifunctional use of floodplains is an increasingly important strategy in some countries, for instance in the Netherlands and Hungary, and management of floodplains goes hand in hand with sustainable economic activities resulting in flood safety and biodiversity conservation. As a result, biodiversity is increasing in some of the areas where multifunctional floodplain management approaches are implemented. We conclude that for efficient use of management resources and ecosystem services, consensual solutions need to be realized and biodiversity needs to be mainstreamed into management activities to maximize ecosystem service provision and potential human benefits. Multifunctionality is more successful where a broad range of stakeholders with diverse expertise and interests are involved in all stages of planning and implementation.
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