Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/72852

TítuloWhy we need sustainable networks bridging countries, disciplines, cultures and generations for Aquatic Biomonitoring 2.0: A Perspective Derived From the DNAqua-Net COST Action
Autor(es)Leese, Florian
Bouchez, Agnes
Abarenkov, Kessy
Altermatt, Florian
Borja, Angel
Bruce, Kat
Ekrem, Torbjorn
Ciampor, Fedor, Jr.
Ciamporova-Zatovicova, Zuzana
Costa, Filipe O.
Duarte, Sofia Alexandra Ferreira
Elbrecht, Vasco
Fontaneto, Diego
Franc, Alain
Geiger, Matthias F.
Hering, Daniel
Kahlert, Maria
Stroil, Belma Kalamujic
Kelly, Martyn
Keskin, Emre
Liska, Igor
Mergen, Patricia
Meissner, Kristian
Pawlowski, Jan
Penev, Lyubomir
Reyjol, Yorick
Rotter, Ana
Steinke, Dirk
van der Wal, Bas
Vitecek, Simon
Zimmermann, Jonas
Weigand, Alexander M.
Palavras-chaveBioassessment
Biotic index
Environmental legislation
Freshwater
Marine
Marine Strategy Framework Directive
Water Framework Directive
Water quality
Data2018
EditoraElsevier
RevistaAdvances in Ecological Research
CitaçãoLeese, F., Bouchez, A., Abarenkov, K., Altermatt, F., Borja, A., Bruce, K., ... & Weigand, A. M. (2018). Why we need sustainable networks bridging countries, disciplines, cultures and generations for aquatic biomonitoring 2.0: a perspective derived from the DNAqua-Net COST action. Advances in ecological research, 58, 63-99
Resumo(s)Aquatic biomonitoring has become an essential task in Europe and many other regions as a consequence of strong anthropogenic pressures affecting the health of lakes, rivers, oceans and groundwater. A typical assessment of the environmental quality status, such as it is required by European but also North American and other legislation, relies on matching the composition of assemblages of organisms identified using morphological criteria present in aquatic ecosystems to those expected in the absence of anthropogenic pressures. Through decade-long and difficult intercalibration exercises among networks of regulators and scientists in European countries, a pragmatic biomonitoring approach was developed and adopted, which now produces invaluable information. Nonetheless, this approach is based on several hundred different protocols, making it susceptible to issues with comparability, scale and resolution. Furthermore, data acquisition is often slow due to a lack of taxonomic experts for many taxa and regions and time-consuming morphological identification of organisms. High-throughput genetic screening methods such as (e)DNA metabarcoding have been proposed as a possible solution to these shortcomings. Such "next-generation biomonitoring", also termed "biomonitoring 2.0", has many advantages over the traditional approach in terms of speed, comparability and costs. It also creates the potential to include new bioindicators and thereby further improves the assessment of aquatic ecosystem health. However, several major conceptual and technological challenges still hinder its implementation into legal and regulatory frameworks. Academic scientists sometimes tend to overlook legal or socioeconomic constraints, which regulators have to consider on a regular basis. Moreover, quantification of species abundance or biomass remains a significant bottleneck to releasing the full potential of these approaches. Here, we highlight the main challenges for next-generation aquatic biomonitoring and outline principles and good practic
TipoCapítulo de livro
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/72852
DOI10.1016/bs.aecr.2018.01.001
ISSN0065-2504
Versão da editorahttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065250418300011
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:CBMA - Livros e Capítulos de Livros/Books and Books Chapters

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