Biodiversity and Sustainability in Flanders:an indicator-based assessment

Flanders is tracking its progress towards the achievement of the 2010 target via 22 biodiversity indicators. They are in line with the focal areas and targets of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the EU biodiversity headline indicators. The indicators are available on www.biodiversityindicators.be. Flanders is a densely populated and economically prosperous region in the northern part of Belgium. It is located in the Western European lowland and belongs almost entirely to the Atlantic biogeographic region. Nearly a quarter of the area is urbanised and about half of its surface i... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Van Daele, Toon
Van Reeth, Wouter
Dumortier, Myriam
Adriaens, Tim
De Bruyn, Luc
Hens, Maarten
Louette, Gerald
Peymen, Johan
Schneiders, Anik
Stevens, Maarten
Vermeersch, Glenn
Dokumenttyp: conferenceObject
Erscheinungsdatum: 2010
Schlagwörter: /dk/atira/pure/thematic/inbo_th_00063 / Natuurindicatoren / /dk/atira/pure/discipline/B000/B003 / B003-ecologie / /dk/atira/pure/policy/beleidsevaluatie / beleidsevaluatie
Sprache: Niederländisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27084146
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://data.inbo.be/pureportal/en/publications/biodiversity-and-sustainability-in-flanders(3ee4a07e-ee97-4af6-8cc1-b2f7ea67f52d).html

Flanders is tracking its progress towards the achievement of the 2010 target via 22 biodiversity indicators. They are in line with the focal areas and targets of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the EU biodiversity headline indicators. The indicators are available on www.biodiversityindicators.be. Flanders is a densely populated and economically prosperous region in the northern part of Belgium. It is located in the Western European lowland and belongs almost entirely to the Atlantic biogeographic region. Nearly a quarter of the area is urbanised and about half of its surface is occupied by agriculture. The Flemish landscape is the most fragmented in Europe.Very specific habitats degrade to more common, usually nutrient-rich habitats. As a consequence, many rare species, restricted to these specific habitats, are declining. Freshwater biodiversity declined sharply during the last century, although a significant recovery has been noticed during the last decade in the larger rivers. Woodland birds have also fared better in recent times.