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WHY
WADI - background history- WHY WADI
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The
WADI project (INCO-CT2005-015226,
2005-2008, VI FP) was developed from two previous INCO-MED projects,
taking advantage of good and bad experience:
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MECO
project - Mediterranean
coastal ECOsystems (1998
- 2001)
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"Baseline
research for an integrated sustainable management of Mediterranean sensitive
coastal ecosystems"
http://www.meco.unifi.it
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MECO
focused on selected sandy beaches across the Mediterranean coasts
at Restinga-Smir (Morocco), Nefza-Zoućara beach (Tunisia), Kneiss Islands
(Tunisia) and the sandy beaches of Malta.
The MECO approach was:
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the
description of elements and systems
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the
identification of impacts
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the
choice of indicators of impacts
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the
development of management plans for the sites
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the
proposal of the management plans to stakeholders
A
number of issues were tackled within the MECO project:
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issues
of scales: different elements of the system have different scales
(e.g. the dunes, the shoreline, the human recreation activities, the
birds, the plants, the burrowing animals, etc.); beaches are open
systems, influenced by marine and inland factors;
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issues
of integration: between disciplines (socioeconomy, geography,
biology), between scientists and environmental managers, between the
international teams;
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issues
of communication: a MECO manual (2002) presented the tecniques and
results using a simple scientific language; meetings with stakeholders
were held to present the results and propose the management plans
developed by the project.
At
the end of the project a Manual was produced where the Partners described
the results obtained and the methodologies developed in the framework of the
MECO project. http://www.ics.trieste.it/Portal/Publication.aspx?id=919&pback='/Portal/
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MEDCORE
project - MEDiterranean
COastal
River
Ecosystems (2002
- 2005)
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"From
river catchment areas to the sea: an integrated and comparative approach to
the ecology of Mediterranean coastal zones for sustainable management"
http://www.medcore.unifi.it http://medcore.cedare.int
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MEDCORE focused on selected coastal
areas related to rivers across the Mediterranean coasts at Oued Laou
(Morocco), Bouterfess-Berkoukech and Ichkeul (Tunisia), Rosetta Nile branch
(Egypt), Ombrone River (Italy), Segura River (Spain) and sandy beaches of
Crete (Greece).
A lesson learnt: beaches are open
systems and should be studied and managed as open systems.
The MEDCORE approach was:
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the
description of elements and systems from watershed to the sea for an
integrated transdisciplinary characterisation of the sites
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the
identification of trends and impacts and the development of early
warning indicators of environmental quality changes
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the
identification of links between compartments and development of
evolutive scenarios
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the
definition of guidelines and ecological criteria for a sustainable
management and development of the areas
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the
proposal of the strategies and criteria developed to managers and
planners
The
following issues were addressed within the MEDCORE project and strategies
were developed to resolve the issues:
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issues
of scales: MEDCORE focused on coastal environments and the
influencing zones from river catchment to the sea - the limits of
the areas were defined functionally - ideally, the whole Mediterranean
basin was the spatial scale of MEDCORE;
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issues
of integration: MEDCORE aimed at linking elements and
compartments and adopted an interdisciplinary integrative approach;
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issues
of communication: the dissemination of MEDCORE results targeted
scientists (international level), environmental managers (national and
regional level) and the local populations (educational level):
International meeting "From
watershed to the sea: interactions and changes" (held in
Florence, November 2005 - Abstracts
and Proceedings); exhibition "Domestic Mediterranean" and
educational materials (available at request: scapini@unifi.it).
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WADI
project - WAter Demand
Integration (2006,
in progress)
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"Sustainable
management of Mediterranean fresh and transitional water bodies: a
socioeconomic and environmental analysis of changes and trends
to enhance and sustain stakeholders benefits"
http://www.wadi.unifi.it
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By
taking advantage of the good and bad experience gained from the previous
projects, WADI chose the following strategy:
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the
flow of communications was down-top (participatory) to make
scientific research useful to the solution of real problems
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the
project focused on the benefits from water body to local population
and aimed at sustaining and enhancing them
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the
spatial dimension was local (study site), national (the partner
country) and international (Mediterranean)
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the
temporal dimension has gone beyond the time lapse of the project, taking
advantage from past knowledge - in the short, medium and long term
A
lesson learnt: impacts are trends of loss of sustainability Ž
understanding the present and the past to forecast and help the
future.
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In synthesis the WADI approach was:
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Meeting
stakeholders starting from local people
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Listening
to their problems with relation to water demand and impacts to the
environment
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Conducting
focused research on the study sites
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Developing
a conceptual framework of the overall situation at each study site
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Building
quantitative system descriptions for the study sites
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Assessing
impacts on different compartments
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Developing
alternative desirable socioeconomic and ecological scenarios
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Selecting
the most appropriate management plans
Who were the stakeholders ?
WADI participants chose a number of study
sites across the Mediterranean coastal areas, in Spain, Italy, Morocco,
Tunisia and Egypt, and identified the stakeholders for water issues at each
site.
Stakeholders identified were: the local population and
their traditional representatives, local farmers, breeders, fishermen and
their representative, agriculture cooperatives, fish traders, irrigation
drainage water authorities, industrial firms, tourism agencies, non
governmental organisations locally operative, local and governmental
authorities (Departments/Agencies of Interior, Fishery, Agriculture, Waters
and Forests, Infrastructures, Environment)
WADI payed a special attention to the weak
stakeholders, who are often not officially represented: women and
children. We wanted to listen and focus to their problems.
WADI took into account the rights of the natural
environment for the benefit of everybody, included the future
generations.
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 "waiting
for new scenarios" (by Daniele Della Valle)
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