• <menu id="888u4"><menu id="888u4"></menu></menu>
  • Applied Radioecological Tracers to Assess Coastal and Marine Ecosystem Health

    Closed for proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    K41019

    CRP

    2210

    Approved Date

    21 June 2018

    Status

    Active - Ongoing

    Start Date

    26 July 2019

    Expected End Date

    31 December 2023

    Participating Countries

    Australia
    Brazil
    Cuba
    France
    Germany
    Mexico
    Türkiye
    United States of America

    Description

    Sustainable management of coastal and marine resources requires extensive comprehension of the current health of these ecosystems as well as capacity for anticipating and predicting future impacts due to changing climate conditions and anthropogenic stressors. Radioecological tracers are invaluable for assessing many aspects of the marine environment, particularly with regards to external perturbations. However, to maintain relevancy and efficiency it is necessary to develop new and further refine existing radiotracers so that these techniques continue to best serve Member States in evaluating coastal and marine ecosystems. Through this CRP, the IAEA will support the development, refinement, and application of radioecological tracers to assist Member States in appraising their coastal and marine resources under both current and future environmental regimes.

    Objectives

    To develop, refine, and apply?radiotracer techniques specific for assessing the state of coastal and marine ecosystems, so that Member States may better evaluate these resources in the face of external perturbations and changing climate conditions.

    Specific objectives

    The primary goal of this CRP is the development, refinement, and application of nuclear techniques to assess coastal and marine ecosystems and their biota, particularly with respect to societally relevant challenges from anthropogenic- and climate change-impacts, such as deoxygenation, HABs, pollution, ocean acidification, and marine plastics. More specifically, relevant nuclear techniques targeted in this CRP should be tailored approaches to respond to Member States’ needs and represent either a proxy of changing conditions in the environment or an ecological/biological response to these marine environmental stressors.

    Contact the project officer

    CAPTCHA
    This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
    Image CAPTCHA

    Stay in touch

    Newsletter

    午夜爱爱爱爱爽爽爽视频网站