Abstract
The Federal State of Saxony (Germany) transposed the EU Water Framework Directive into state law, identifying 617 surface water bodies (rivers and streams) for implementation of the water framework directive (WFD). Their ecological status was classified by biological quality elements (macrophytes and phytobenthos, benthic invertebrates and fish, and in large rivers, phytoplankton) and specific synthetic and non-synthetic pollutants. Hydromorphological and physico-chemical quality elements were used to identify significant anthropogenic pressures, which surface water bodies are susceptible to, and to assess the effect of these pressures on the status of surface water bodies. In 2009, the data for classification of the ecological status and the main pressures and impacts on water bodies were published in the river basin management plans (RBMP) of the Elbe and Oder rivers. To that date, only 23 (4%) streams achieved an ecological status of “good”, while the rest failed to achieve the environmental objective. The two main reasons for the failure were significant alterations to the stream morphology (81% of all streams) and nutrient enrichment (62%) caused by point (industrial and municipal waste water treatment plants) and non-point (surface run-off from arable fields, discharges from urban drainages and decentralized waste water treatment plants) sources. It was anticipated that a further 55 streams would achieve the environmental objective by 2015, but the remaining 539 need extended deadlines.
Highlights
Biodiversity and ecosystem integrity of rivers and streams in Central Europe has been impacted on by human activities for centuries [1]
This paper focuses solely on the classification of the ecological status of the identified water bodies, as well as the predicted improvement of the ecological status that might be achieved by implementing the program of measures
The results showed the deviation of stream morphology from natural reference conditions rated from 1 to 7
Summary
Biodiversity and ecosystem integrity of rivers and streams in Central Europe has been impacted on by human activities for centuries [1]. Results of the monitoring program, including biological, hydromorphologial and physico-chemical quality elements provide some detailed indications of anthropogenic stressors impairing ecosystem integrity of rivers and streams. These indications could be used to plan mitigation measures to reduce the effects of anthropogenic pressures. The WFD demands a program of measures to reduce the human impacts on the ecological status of water bodies for each river basin, and to list the environmental objective according to Article No 4 of the WFD [7] for each water body that must be achieved until the end of the six-year duration of the RBMPs. Every member state of the European Union must report the RBMPs to the European Commission (EU-COM), which will examine the quality of each single step of the implementation to fulfill the preset requirements of the WFD.
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