Home Database Research and knowledge projects Integrated water resources and coastal zone management in European lagoons in the context of climate change
Website experience degraded
The European Climate and Health Observatory is undergoing reconstruction until June 2024 to improve its performance. We apologise for any possible disturbance to the content and functionality of the platform.
Project

Integrated water resources and coastal zone management in European lagoons in the context of climate change (LAGOONS)

This object has been archived because its content is outdated. You can still access it as legacy

Description:

The environmental issue of concern of the LAGOONS project is the anthropogenic deterioration and climate change impacts (especially the effects of extreme weather event) on surface water and lagoons ecosystems. The main objective of the LAGOONS project is to contribute to a science-based seamless strategy – in an integrated and coordinated fashion – of the management of lagoons seen under the land-sea and science-policy-stakeholder interface; i.e., the project seeks to underpin the integration of the EU Water Framework Directive, Habitat Directive, the EU’s ICZM Recommendation, and the EU Marine Strategy Directive.

Four case study lagoons have been selected to represent a set of “hotspot” coastal lagoons with a wide and balanced geographical distribution and different characteristics: Vistula Lagoon in Baltic Sea (transboundary Poland/Russia); Tylygulskyi Lagoon in Black Sea (Ukraine); Ria de Aveiro Lagoon in Atlantic Ocean (Portugal), and Mar Menor in the Mediterranean Sea (Spain). By means of elaborating integrated strategies for sustainable development of the case study lagoons in the climate change context, the LAGOONS project aims to demonstrate that it is possible to enhance connectivity between research and policy-making using a proactive approach to water issues.

Project information

Lead

University of Aveiro, Portugal, and Bioforsk- Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, Norway

Partners

Institute of Hydro-Engineering of the Polish Academy of Sciences (PL) Atlantic Branch of P. P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of Russian Academy of Sciences (RU) Sea Fisheries Institute in Gdynia (PL) University of Dundee (UK) Odessa State Environmental University (UA) Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (DE) Universidad de Murcia (ES)

Source of funding

FP7

Reference information

Websites:

Published in Climate-ADAPT Jun 07 2016   -   Last Modified in Climate-ADAPT Dec 12 2023

Document Actions