Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., Wetlands are havens of biodiversity, and have important ecological,
hydrological and economic value, but their misuse can have devastating
consequences. Satellite data are being used for wetland conservation and
management.
In 1977, the Ramsar Convention declared the Azraq wetland as a major
station for migratory birds on the African–Eurasian flyway. Due to
excessive pumping of water from the oasis and illegal drilling of wells
for agricultural purposes, water levels have steadily dropped for 50
years. The wetland rescue started in 1994 with the objective to restore
a significant portion of the wetland, and to increase depleted water
levels by 10%. The Land Use Land Cover map of Azraq in 2005 provides a
detailed classification of all land parcels within wetland sites,
distinguishing between water, natural areas and artificial surfaces.
Wetlands are havens of biodiversity, and have important ecological,
hydrological and economic value, but their misuse can have devastating
consequences. Satellite data are being used for wetland conservation and
management.
In the arid desert of central-eastern Jordan, the Azraq oasis is the only permanent source of fresh water for about 12 000 sq km, and provides drinking water for about a quarter of the country’s capital and largest city, Amman.
In the arid desert of central-eastern Jordan, the Azraq oasis is the only permanent source of fresh water for about 12 000 sq km, and provides drinking water for about a quarter of the country’s capital and largest city, Amman.
Historically, the water source made Azraq a major desert route,
facilitating trade in the region. It is also an important station for
migratory birds on the African–Eurasian flyway.
But excessive pumping of water from the oasis and illegal drilling of
wells for agricultural purposes have caused water levels to drop
steadily over the past 50 years – depleting water from the wetland area.
A significant decrease of water starting in 1981 reached threatening
levels in 1993, forcing many migratory birds to move away from the area.
This motivated a project to rescue the wetland and increase dwindling
water levels in 1994.
The 11th Conference of the Parties of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
was held in Bucharest, Romania, 6–13 July 2012. The theme of the
conference was ‘Wetlands: home and destination’. The Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands, signed in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971, is an intergovernmental
treaty that provides the political framework for international
cooperation for the preservation and sustainable development of wetlands
of international importance. There are 162 countries that have endorsed
the Convention, with 2040 wetland sites covering a total of 193 million
hectares.
Credits: Romania, Ramsar COP-11
To map the progress of Azraq’s rescue project, as well as monitor
other wetlands worldwide, data from Earth-observing satellites are being
exploited to map the areas’ water, natural land and artificial surfaces
in high detail.
The further development of internationally coordinated actions for the
conservation and sustainable use of wetlands came into focus last week
at the 11th Conference of the Parties (COP-11) of the Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands held in Bucharest, Romania.
Wetlands are havens of biodiversity and have an inestimable ecological
value as habitat for various wild animals such as migratory birds.
They have an important hydrological value through their natural drainage
systems which can also act as a protection dam to cope with droughts
and excessive water during the rainy seasons such as floods.
Change detection map, comparing national park of Ichkeul lies
between the Mogods mountains and the Mediterranean coast of northwest
Tunisia in 1972 and 1990. Earth observation data archives, with imagery
acquired from the 1970s, are a unique source of information to assess
the historical evolution of wetlands worldwide. This lake–marsh
ecosystem has been classified as a Biosphere Reserve in 1977, included
in the Ramsar list in 1980 and subsequently nominated as a World
Heritage site. The prolonged droughts and the reduction of freshwater
inflows due to the construction of three dams on the incoming rivers
have resulted in a destructive increase of salinity and sediments and in
the loss of freshwater plant species. Following the success of some
extensive restoration work, the lake has been removed from the UNESCO
list of World heritages in danger in 2006.
Credits: GlobWetland II project team, ANPE (Tunisia)
Wetlands are also an economic value for water resource development,
fishery industry and ecological tourism, and a social value such as
poverty eradication through the supply of water and food to local
population.
In the recent years, the use of satellite Earth observations with
innovative geospatial analysis has proved to be a key tool and unique
information source to support the environmental community in different
application domains, including wetlands conservation and management.
Part of the Ramsar strategic plan is to develop a Global Wetlands
Observing System (GWOS) that would allow an increase in the
accessibility of data and information on wetlands and reporting on
changes in wetlands status, worldwide.
In response, ESA launched the GlobWetland II project as a GWOS regional pilot project in the southern Mediterranean basin.
The project’s principal objective was to develop a software – or
‘toolbox’ – that can be used by all Ramsar Parties to assess and monitor
their wetlands with satellite images.
More than 2000 GlobWetland II maps and indicators have been produced on
200 wetland sites selected in the coastal river catchment in ten
countries along the Southern Mediterranean Basin, from Morocco to Syria.
Credits: GlobWetland II project, Google Earth
Over 2000 wetland-related maps and indicators have been produced by
the project on 200 wetland sites and surrounding areas of the Southern
Mediterranean basin, extending from Morocco to Syria.
The GlobWetland II toolbox and database have already been installed in
five of the project’s ten countries, with dedicated training sessions in
Jordan (with the participation of Libya and Lebanon), Algeria and
Tunisia.
At COP-11, ESA organised a side event to present the GW-II toolbox and
products, and to show how their use is being extended to other wetlands
in the Mediterranean basin by the Tour du Valat wetlands research
centre, host of the Mediterranean Wetlands Observatory.
Participants at the side event acknowledged the ESA’s efforts and
resources in promoting and demonstrating the benefits of Earth
observation technology for the Ramsar Convention, and in developing a
toolbox that can be used by the Contracting Parties.
ESAGuillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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