The role of Palaeolimnology in implementing the water framework directive in Ireland
Citation
Dalton, C., Taylor, D. and Jennings, E. 2009 The role of palaeolimnology in implementing the Water Framework Directive in Ireland. Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 109B, 161–74DOI: 10.3318/ BIOE.2009.109.3.161.
Date
2009Author
Dalton, Catherine
Taylor, David
Jennings, Eleanor
Peer Reviewed
YesMetadata
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Dalton, C., Taylor, D. and Jennings, E. 2009 The role of palaeolimnology in implementing the Water Framework Directive in Ireland. Biology and Environment: Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 109B, 161–74DOI: 10.3318/ BIOE.2009.109.3.161.
Abstract
The EU Water Framework Directive has created research opportunities and challenges for
water-quality managers and palaeolimnologists alike. Opportunities have arisen through
increased attention to water-quality issues, and these in turn have led to enhanced funding for
palaeolimnological research. Scientific challenges include identifying aquatic-system pressures,
assessing risks, defi ning non-impacted reference conditions and developing new indicator and
classifi cation systems. These challenges have provided the aquatic science research communities
with a range of highly relevant and urgent research questions. Addressing these
questions requires a collaborative, systematic, whole-catchment approach that, in addition
to palaeolimnologists, involves modellers and scientists from other disciplines, water-quality managers, policy-makers and the general public.
Keywords
PalaeolimnologicalWater Framework Directive