| Literature DB >> 28752018 |
Sarah E Crawford1, Catrina Brüll Nee Cofalla2, Benedikt Aumeier3, Markus Brinkmann4,5, Elisa Classen2, Verena Esser6, Caroline Ganal2, Elena Kaip7, Roger Häussling7, Frank Lehmkuhl6, Peter Letmathe8, Anne-Katrin Müller1, Ilja Rabinovitch8, Klaus Reicherter9, Jan Schwarzbauer10, Marco Schmitt7, Georg Stauch6, Matthias Wessling3, Süleyman Yüce3, Markus Hecker4,5, Karen A Kidd11, Rolf Altenburger1,12,13, Werner Brack1,12, Holger Schüttrumpf2, Henner Hollert1.
Abstract
Protecting our water resources in terms of quality and quantity is considered one of the big challenges of the twenty-first century, which requires global and multidisciplinary solutions. A specific threat to water resources, in particular, is the increased occurrence and frequency of flood events due to climate change which has significant environmental and socioeconomic impacts. In addition to climate change, flooding (or subsequent erosion and run-off) may be exacerbated by, or result from, land use activities, obstruction of waterways, or urbanization of floodplains, as well as mining and other anthropogenic activities that alter natural flow regimes. Climate change and other anthropogenic induced flood events threaten the quantity of water as well as the quality of ecosystems and associated aquatic life. The quality of water can be significantly reduced through the unintentional distribution of pollutants, damage of infrastructure, and distribution of sediments and suspended materials during flood events. To understand and predict how flood events and associated distribution of pollutants may impact ecosystem and human health, as well as infrastructure, large-scale interdisciplinary collaborative efforts are required, which involve ecotoxicologists, hydrologists, chemists, geoscientists, water engineers, and socioeconomists. The research network "project house water" consists of a number of experts from a wide range of disciplines and was established to improve our current understanding of flood events and associated societal and environmental impacts. The concept of project house and similar seed fund and boost fund projects was established by the RWTH Aachen University within the framework of the German excellence initiative with support of the German research foundation (DFG) to promote and fund interdisciplinary research projects and provide a platform for scientists to collaborate on innovative, challenging research. Project house water consists of six proof-of-concept studies in very diverse and interdisciplinary areas of research (ecotoxicology, water, and chemical process engineering, geography, sociology, economy). The goal is to promote and foster high-quality research in the areas of water research and flood-risk assessments that combine and build off-laboratory experiments with modeling, monitoring, and surveys, as well as the use of applied methods and techniques across a variety of disciplines.Entities:
Keywords: (micro)pollutants removal; Biomarker; Emergency drinking water treatment; Erosion; Fish exposure; Flood event; Renaturation; Sediment mobilization; Sediment toxicity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28752018 PMCID: PMC5504220 DOI: 10.1186/s12302-017-0121-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Eur ISSN: 2190-4715 Impact factor: 5.893
Fig. 1The input and distribution of sediment-associated contaminants in an aquatic system
(adapted from [12])
Fig. 2History of water-related research development and previously approved and submitted projects from which project house water has emerged, beginning with the investigations in the Pathfinder/Seed funded project Floodsearch I. Blue-colored projects are funded by RWTH Aachen University Exploratory Research Space (ERS) with support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; German Research Foundation) Excellence Initiative; orange-colored projects are funded by the Bundesanstalt für Gewässerkunde (BfG; German Federal Institute of Hydrology); red-colored projects are funded by the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF; Federal Ministry of Education and Research); yellow-colored projects are funded by the DFG (e.g., high-performance scientific computing in terrestrial systems (HPSC) graduate school; green-colored projects such as solutions and the European innovative training network effect-directed analysis (EU ITN EDA) Emerge are funded by the European Union; and gray-colored projects are funded by the Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt (DBU; German federal foundation for the environment)
Fig. 3Summary of the interdisciplinary partnerships of project house water with six core teams from Germany and abroad working together on the six proof-of-concept subprojects
Fig. 4Annular flume at the institute for hydraulic engineering and water resources management, RWTH Aachen University, Germany