Environmental Conservation

  • Environmental Conservation (2003), 30 : pp 104-130
  • Copyright © 2003 Foundation for Environmental Conservation
  • DOI: 10.1017/S0376892903000109 (About DOI)
  • Published online: 26 August 2003


Paper

Present state and future prospects for groundwater ecosystems


Dan L. Danielopol a1c1, Christian Griebler a2, Amara Gunatilaka a3 and Jos Notenboom a4
a1 Institute of Limnology, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Mondseestrasse 9, A 5310 Mondsee, Austria
a2 Center for Applied Geosciences, Department of Environmental Mineralogy, University of Tübingen, Wilhelmstrasse 56, D 72074, Tübingen, Germany
a3 Water Resources Management, Verbundplan Ltd, Engineers & Consultants, Parkring 12, A 1010 Vienna, Austria and Institute of Medical Biology, Laboratory of Ecophysiology and Ecotoxicology, University of Vienna, Währingerstraße 10, A 1090 Vienna, Austria
a4 Netherlands Office for Environmental Assessment, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Post Box 1, NL 3720 BA Bilthoven, The Netherlands

Article author query
danielopol d   [PubMed][Google Scholar] 
griebler c   [PubMed][Google Scholar] 
gunatilaka a   [PubMed][Google Scholar] 
notenboom j   [PubMed][Google Scholar] 

Abstract

Ecological and socioeconomic aspects of subterranean hydrosystems have changed during the past 40–50 years. The major environmental pressures (mainly anthropogenic ones) impact the quantity and quality of groundwater resources and the state of subsurface ecosystems, and it is expected that the environmental pressures on groundwater will continue, at least until 2025, unless new environmental policies change this state of affairs. The world demographic increase and the general rise of water demand constitute one of the major environmental pressures on groundwater ecosystems especially in less developed countries in Africa, Asia and South America. Specific human activities leading to the depletion of groundwater reserves include agricultural practices, landscape alteration, urbanization demand for domestic and public drinking water, various industrial activities such as thermoelectric production and mining, and the rise of tourism in coastal areas. Climate change is contributing to the water crisis too, especially in areas with arid climate and/or in some humid monsoonal countries. The overload of aquifers with pollutants derived from agriculture (fertilizers and pesticides), from industry (release of hydrocarbon chemicals, especially spills), from waste and industrial waters, from domestic and industrial landfills, from the infiltration of pollutants from surface and from the intrusion of saline water affect groundwater quality. The dangerous increase in contaminated subsurface sites with chemicals and microbial pathogens brings with it health risks to humans. Changes of redox condition in groundwater zones, changes of biological diversity, vegetation changes with modification of agriculture practices and impacts at the biosphere scale, such as the increase in the concentration of nitrous oxides in the atmosphere, all impact groundwater ecosystems. Groundwater ecosystems must be better investigated and understood. Economic, social and ecological lines of thinking have to be combined in order to achieve meaningful policies for the sustainable development of groundwater reserves and for the protection of subsurface ecosystems. Practical measures and ideas for the development of policies up to the 2025 time-horizon should improve the sustainable usage of the world's groundwater resources.

(Received July 15 2002)
(Accepted December 17 2002)


Key Words: groundwater ecosystems; environmental management; ecological sustainability; groundwater depletion; groundwater pollution; groundwater protection; biological diversity.

Correspondence:
c1 Correspondence: Professor Dan L. Danielopol Tel: +43 6232 312527 Fax +43 6232 3578 e-mail: dan.danielopol@oeaw.ac.at


--