Case study:Environmental Restoration of the Lower Section of the Bembézar River and its River Environment (Phase 1): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 11:42, 25 February 2020
Project overview
Status | In progress |
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Project web site | http://www.chguadalquivir.es/inicio |
Themes | Habitat and biodiversity, Land use management - forestry, Monitoring, Social benefits |
Country | Spain |
Main contact forename | Maria Jesus |
Main contact surname | Castañeda |
Main contact user ID | |
Contact organisation | Guadalquivir Hydrographic Confederation. Ministry for Ecological Transition. |
Contact organisation web site | http://www.chguadalquivir.es/inicio |
Partner organisations | |
Parent multi-site project | |
This is a parent project encompassing the following projects |
No |
Project summary
With the aim of reorienting development towards sustainability, the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Food and the Environment has become aware of the importance of recovering the beds and banks of our rivers, and as a result has designed the National Strategy for Restoration of Rivers, a project that aims to recover river masses. It is a question of giving back to the river what was its own, its space, its vegetation, its water..., so that by itself it is capable of recovering its associated ecosystem.
And following the requirements of the Water Framework Directive, approved in December 2000 and obligatory for the Spanish State, the objective is to ensure that rivers and streams recover their "good ecological status", and to make all administrative uses and actions compatible with the conservation of their natural values. The implementation of the National Strategy for the Restoration of Rivers is based on debate and consensus. We have sought the maximum participation of representatives of all entities of society to have the approval of all.
The objective of this project is the environmental restoration of the lower stretch of the Bembézar River and its surroundings, which also includes the final stretch of its tributary, the Guadalora stream and the Madre Vieja river corridor (the former arm of the Guadalquivir that joins the Bembézar).
The lower section of the Bembézar River is surrounded by extensive irrigated land that uses its waters through the hydraulic infrastructures created in its basin (reservoirs, canals and irrigation systems). It is thus a heavily regulated river, with three reservoirs upstream of this stretch, so that the recovery of it to its natural state is unfeasible. On the other hand, it is affected by important infrastructures that cross its course. The AVE trains tracks limit the lower section to the north and half of the section is crossed by the Seville-Cordoba railway and the Seville-Cordoba road (A-431).
The project carries out actions to improve the natural environment through the cleaning of the riverbed and the restoration of autochthonous riverside vegetation; integration actions in a fluvial space, such as the construction of a pedestrian path and a footbridge over the river; and the conditioning of infrastructures for public use through the cleaning of vegetation from the existing Medieval Bridge in the Bembézar riverbed.
Monitoring surveys and results
Lessons learnt
Image gallery
Catchment and subcatchmentSelect a catchment/subcatchment
Catchment
Subcatchment
Site
Project background
Cost for project phases
Reasons for river restoration
Measures
MonitoringHydromorphological quality elements
Biological quality elements
Physico-chemical quality elements
Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic
Monitoring documents
Additional documents and videos
Additional links and references
Supplementary InformationEdit Supplementary Information
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