National Floodplains Program - Contribution to Climate Change mitigation and conservation of biodiversity

In the first work step in this R&D project, an assessment is made of the actual and potential contribution of floodplains in Germany to the preservation of biodiversity, climate protection and adaptation to the climate change. In a second step, the development potential of floodplains in Germany will be identified, and the effects on biodiversity for climate change adaptation and climate protection, the functions of the floodplains and other ecosystem services will be specified and quantified more tangibly in the form of scenarios. Economic aspects will be included. Knowledge from past large-scale revitalisation projects for floodplains will be included in the scenarios, in order to permit estimates of time horizons and costs in each case.
Objectives:
Within the framework of the project, the development potential of floodplains in Germany will be identified, and the effects on biodiversity for climate change adaptation and climate protection, the functions of the floodplains and other ecosystem services will be specified and quantified tangibly in the form of scenarios. The results are to be used to determine courses of action for protecting and developing the floodplains, at a national level.
Based on national data on wetlands and flood plains (see Floodplain Conditions Report (“Auenzustandbericht”)) the objective of this study is to concretize nationwide statements about the functions and ecosystem roles of floodplains and quantify and describe the effects of different scenarios on floodplain ecology. Central questions are:
No own climate scenarios will be created: climate projections reflecting the current state of knowledge will be taken into account; cooperation and use of the findings of the GLOWA-Elbe project
Possible scenarios are:
river run-off
Examination of the effects of the climate change and of climate adaptation measures in river landscapes on biodiversity and floodplain ecology. The functions of floodplain ecology considered are:
In particular, the extensive loss of flood plains, which on the great rivers in Germany is about by 80%, shows the need for the creation of new retention areas, such as through dyke realignment.
To identify opportunities and synergies in river landscapes for adaptation to the climate change through a nature-oriented development of waterbodies and floodplains and to describe the effects on biodiversity, climate protection and other ecosystem services.
Presentation of synergies between climate adaptation measures, climate protection measures and biodiversity conservation measures.
In particular, the naturally shaped river landscapes of North-East Germany have a high potential to serve as carbon sinks, however, due to dehydration and non-site appropriate local land use, they are currently also a source of climate-affecting greenhouse gases.
Federal Office for Nature Conservation (BfN) with funds from the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB)
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), Department of Economics
Helmholtz-Zentrum für Umweltforschung - UFZ
Department Naturschutzforschung
Permoserstraße 15
D-04318 Leipzig