04909nam a22004215i 4500001001800000003000900018005001700027007001500044008004100059020001800100020001900118024003100137100002600168245011100194246012400305264004600429300003500475336002600510337002600536338003600562347002400598505216100622520127302783650002104056650002804077650001304105650001704118650002504135650002604160650002104186650003404207700003104241700002804272710003404300773002004334776003604354856009704390978-1-4020-4738-1DE-He21320260521092113.0cr nn 008mamaa100301s2006 ne | s |||| 0|eng d a9781402047381 a997814020473817 a10.1007/1-4020-4738-X2doi1 aBaba, Alper.eeditor.10aGroundwater and Ecosystemsh[electronic resource] /cedited by Alper Baba, Ken W. F. Howard, Orhan Gunduz.3 aProceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Groundwater and Ecosystems, Canakkale, Turkey, 5-7 September 2005 1aDordrecht :bSpringer Netherlands,c2006. aXVII, 310 p.bonline resource. atextbtxt2rdacontent acomputerbc2rdamedia aonline resourcebcr2rdacarrier atext filebPDF2rda0 aRemote sensing techniques to monitoring coastal plain areas suffering from salt water intrusion and etection of fresh water discharge in coastal, karstic areas: case studies from greece -- Effects of fly ash from coal-burning electrical utilities on ecosystem and utilization of fly ash -- Groundwater age: a vital information in protecting the groundwater dependent ecosystem -- Groundwater in semi-arid mediterranean areas: desertification, soil salinization and ecosystems -- Assessment of vulnerability of water resources to climate change: ecohydrological implications -- Predicting probable effects of urbanization on future ecological integrity in the upper illinois river basin, USA -- Geochemical modelling of geothermal fluids - application of the computer program SOLMINEQ.88 -- Ground water vulnerability assessment for intermontane valleys using chu valley of kyrghyzstan as an example -- Surface/subsurface interactions: coupling mechanisms and numerical solution procedures -- Ground-surface water interactions and the role of the hyporheic zone -- Ground water management at irrigated lands of uzbekistan and its influence on ecological system -- Improved groundwater management strategies at the amu darya river -- The impact of groundwater production and exploitation on ecosystem in azerbaijan -- On modelling of ground and surface water interactions -- Nitrogen leaching in an aquatic terrestrial transition zone -- Interactions between groundwater - surface water and terrestrial eco-systems -- Natural water supply and fertilization interactions on crops yield in fragile agroecosystem -- Groundwater fluxes in arid and semi-arid environments -- Water management in thessaly, central greece -- Modeling of heavy metal contamination within an irrigated area -- Using of groundwater for increasing of water supply of irrigation systems in arid zone -- Groundwater modelling in atlantic coastal ecosystems (south portugal) -- Global change, its impact on functions of aquifer systems and their dependent ecosystems -- The vulnerability of groundwater dependent ecosystems: a study on the porsuk river basin (turkey) as a typical example. aGroundwater Dependent Ecosystems (GDEs) frequently exhibit rich biological diversity and can provide enormous economic wealth. In recent years, GDEs in many industrialized countries have shown signs of serious degradation, primarily the result of groundwater abstraction and pollution. Many such systems, including a number of well documented cases in Eastern Europe, are no longer sustainable. As a consequence, the conservation and sustainable management of GDEs has emerged as one of the most urgent environmental research priorities of our time. A large percentage of the world's population lives in cities and either depends on, or is affected in some way, by groundwater. Moreover, groundwater has become a very important and complex issue that attracts the interest of many diverse stakeholders. Many problems related to groundwater and ecosystems are shared by countries throughout the world and there is growing recognition that much can be gained by co-operation on an international scale. This is no time to be complacent and it is critical that key problems be identified, that the potential consequences of these problems be understood, and that the development of solutions begins urgently. Important data gaps must be recognized and filled without delay 0aAPPLIED ECOLOGY. 0aENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES. 0aECOLOGY.14aGEOSCIENCES.24aAPPLIED GEOSCIENCES.24aENVIRONMENT, GENERAL.24aAPPLIED ECOLOGY.24aGEOECOLOGY/NATURAL PROCESSES.1 aHoward, Ken W. F.eeditor.1 aGunduz, Orhan.eeditor.2 aSpringerLink (Online service)0 tSpringer eBooks08iPrinted edition:z978140204736740uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4738-XzVer el texto completo en las instalaciones del CICY