Abstract

It is shown that, in the modern period of active hydraulic engineering and river-flow regulation, which is also accompanied by significant changes in climate, the natural existence of a relict riparian forest is impossible. There is a need for artificial support by means of the periodic targeted flooding of the last remaining remnant riparian ecosystems and the conservation of the various stages of degraded tugai. In connection with the main actively developing degradation process of riparian woodlands associated with the general halophytization of the former riparian soils, as well as the current lack of water resources and the prospect of reducing them in the future, the restoration of lost ecosystems should begin with halophytic variants of riparian woodlands using the method of minimal flooding with waste saline waters.

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