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On the hydrological relationship between Petrifying-springs, Alkaline-fens, and Calcareous-spring-mires in the lowlands of North-West and Central Europe; consequences for restoration

Ab P. Grootjans, L. Wołejko, H. de Mars, Royal Haskoning DHV, Maastricht Airport, The Netherlands, A.J.P. Smolders, Gijs van Dijk

2021Mires and Peat14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(1) Petrifying-springs and Calcareous-spring-mires are threatened ecosystems in Europe and are protected under the Natura 2000 Habitats Directive. In European and national legislations Petrifying-springs and associated tufa cascades, small streams and flushes (7220) are treated as separate entities from Alkaline-fens and Calcareous-spring-mires (7230), each with their own protection and restoration measures. This may, however, create conflicts if the two habitats are physically connected or adjacent to one another: restoration measures aimed at one of the two may have negative effects on the other. (2) The present study focuses on the spatial and temporal relationships between Petrifying-springs and Alkaline-fens with tufa deposition, and discusses consequences of this relationship for restoration of degraded sites. When a Petrifying-spring co-occurs with an Alkaline-fen or Calcareous-spring-mire, restoration measures should take account of the needs of both habitat types.

Topics & Concepts

Spring (device)CalcareousGeologyPeatHot springHydrology (agriculture)GeographyPaleontologyArchaeologyGeotechnical engineeringMechanical engineeringEngineeringPeatlands and Wetlands Ecology
On the hydrological relationship between Petrifying-springs, Alkaline-fens, and Calcareous-spring-mires in the lowlands of North-West and Central Europe; consequences for restoration | Litcius