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2018 IMCG Field Symposium / General Assembly

Safe the dates:

Arrival: Monday August 20, Amsterdam,

Departure: Friday, 31. August, Utrecht. For people that want to stay one more day in Utrecht, accommodation on Friday 31st August is available on request. Transportation from Utrecht to Amsterdam airport will be organised.

IMCG Symposium: Wednesday 22 August: NIOZ research Centre, Island of Texel: 8.30-17.00.
The program for the IMCG Symposium is online.

Field excursions: Tuesday 21 (Island of Texel) and August 23-31.

Number of participants: 50 max.

IMCG general assembly: Thursday 31th August Academiegebouw, Domplein Utrecht: 9.30-12.30

Documents and Agenda for the IMCG General Assembly are available online.

Detailed programme The detailed programme is now available.

Excursion guide is online. A printed copy will be handed out to the participants

Estimated costs:

Early bird IMCG members (registration and payment before May 1st 2018: 850 Euro/person. Non-members pay 930 Euro/person. Payments cover accommodation, transport within the Netherlands, lunch packages, diners, excursion guide and abstracts book.

After 1st May 2018 registration costs for IMCG members will be 900 Eur/person (non-members: 980 Eur/person). So, register and become a member of the IMCG now.

Registration: Registration is closed.

The Dutch experiences in restoration ecology and challenges for the future

The Netherlands is densely populated and the development of infrastructure and intensification of agriculture in the sixties and seventies of the last century has destroyed or damaged most of our existing nature reserves. But this has also triggered much practical and fundamental research aimed at understanding the mechanisms of wet ecosystem decline in the Netherlands. During the 1980s and 1990s the government decided to buy out farmers in areas where modern agriculture was no longer viable and hand the lands over to nature conservation organizations. Such areas were then transformed into nature areas, by raising water levels and decreasing nutrient availability. During that period much knowledge was developed in restoring wet ecosystems that were once rather intensively used by agriculture.

We aim to show the participants areas where scientific and practical knowledge in Dutch restoration areas has developed. Important research papers for each area visited will be available on the IMCG web site.

Boat on dutch polder waterway

Typically Dutch peat polder landscape with the water higher than the land. Photo: Hans Joosten

We aim to show the participants areas where scientific and practical knowledge in Dutch restoration areas has developed.

In the Netherlands intensive discussions are taking place about the future of the peatland landscape, see graphics below. Currently large peatland areas are subject to drainage-induced subsidence (“bodemdaling”) leading to ever increasing height differences between deeply drained and pumped, intensively used agricultural lands on the one hand (left picture foreground) and low intensity agriculture, settlement and nature conservation sites with much higher water levels on the other hand (left background). It is clear that continued pumping and subsidence (“loslaten”, left picture) is impossible, but what are the alternatives: continuing conventional land use but raise the water levels somewhat to slow down subsidence (“remmen”, central picture), or stopping subsidence completely by raising the water level to at or over the surface and changing land use towards wet livelihoods, including paludicultures, floating solar energy, and wet tourism (right picture).

https://www.provincie-utrecht.nl/onderwerpen/alle-onderwerpen/bodemdaling/

Source: www.provincie-utrecht.nl/onderwerpen/alle-onderwerpen/bodemdaling/

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