The future of global river health monitoring

Lauren M. Kuehne, Chris Dickens, David Tickner, Mathis L. Messager, Julian D. Olden, Gordon O’Brien, Bernhard Lehner, Nishadi Eriyagama
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Rivers are the arteries of human civilisation and culture, providing essential goods and services that underpin water and food security, socio-economic development and climate resilience. They also support an extraordinary diversity of biological life. Human appropriation of land and water together with changes in climate have jointly driven rapid declines in river health and biodiversity worldwide, stimulating calls for an Emergency Recovery Plan for freshwater ecosystems. Yet freshwater ecosystems like rivers have been consistently under-represented within global agreements such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. Even where such agreements acknowledge that river health is important, implementation is hampered by inadequate global-scale indicators and a lack of coherent monitoring efforts. Consequently, there is no reliable basis for tracking global trends in river health, assessing the impacts of international agreements on river ecosystems and guiding global investments in river management to priority issues or regions. We reviewed national and regional approaches for river health monitoring to develop a comprehensive set of scalable indicators that can support “top-down” global surveillance while also facilitating standardised “bottom-up” local monitoring efforts. We evaluate readiness of these indicators for implementation at a global scale, based on their current status and emerging improvements in underlying data sources and methodologies. We chart a road map that identifies data and technical priorities and opportunities to advance global river health monitoring such that an adequate monitoring framework could be in place and implemented by 2030, with the potential for substantial enhancement by 2050. Lastly, we present recommendations for coordinated action and investment by policy makers, research funders and scientists to develop and implement the framework to support conservation and restoration of river health globally.
全球河流健康监测的未来
河流是人类文明和文化的动脉,提供基本商品和服务,是水和粮食安全、社会经济发展和气候适应能力的基础。它们还支持着生物生命的非凡多样性。人类占用土地和水资源,加上气候变化,共同导致全球河流健康和生物多样性迅速下降,促使人们呼吁制定淡水生态系统紧急恢复计划。然而,像河流这样的淡水生态系统在联合国可持续发展目标和联合国生物多样性公约等全球协议中一直没有得到充分代表。即使在这些协议承认河流健康很重要的地方,由于全球尺度指标不足和缺乏协调一致的监测工作,实施也受到阻碍。因此,没有可靠的基础来跟踪河流健康的全球趋势,评估国际协定对河流生态系统的影响,并将全球河流管理投资引导到优先问题或区域。我们审查了国家和区域的河流健康监测方法,以制定一套全面的可扩展指标,既能支持"自上而下"的全球监测,又能促进标准化的"自下而上"的地方监测工作。我们根据这些指标的现状和基础数据来源和方法的新改进,评估这些指标在全球范围内实施的准备情况。我们绘制了一张路线图,确定了数据和技术优先事项以及推进全球河流健康监测的机会,以便到2030年建立和实施适当的监测框架,到2050年有可能大幅加强。最后,我们提出了政策制定者、研究资助者和科学家协调行动和投资的建议,以制定和实施框架,支持全球河流健康的保护和恢复。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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