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Thematic Issue – Water management in the Camargue

How research contributes to the adaptive management of the Rhone delta?

In the Rhone delta, water exchange and the different uses of water are conditioned by the climate, agricultural hydraulic management, and the geographical limitations imposed by the river and marine environment. In this complex system, policy makers and managers lack a tool for helping them make decisions and forecasts. This newsletter reports on the latest studies in which the Tour du Valat is involved.

A delta takes form through a natural process in which it expands and shrinks, under the combined influence of a river and the sea. For more than one and a half centuries, human intervention, intended to enhance its economic value and ensure people’s safety, has negatively affected this process in the Camargue. The system of dykes has made these wetland ecosystems highly dependant on a supply of water from the Rhone, which is mainly used for agricultural purposes.

The Ile de Camargue’s increasing vulnerability

Today, the delta is facing several risks:

 

 

 

 

Modelling the hydro systems is required to develop decision-making help tools

Faced with these risks and the future effects of climate change, site managers and policy makers need models enabling them to simulate how the hydrological systems in the delta function to guide them in making decisions concerning future development, and also for the purposes of crisis management (floods). That is why Tour du Valat hydrologists are developing tools for the hydrological modelling of the Ile de Camargue. A significant part of this job consists in imagining hydro-climatic scenarios and proposing management rules that can evolve in function of global change.
 
Several research projects initiated and funded by the French Ministry of Ecology and Sustainable Development (MEEDDM) have been carried out in the Camargue. Results have been obtained and recommendations formulated, and now the chief objective is to transfer the tools and knowledge acquired to the site managers.
 
Examples of projects in which the Tour du Valat is involved:
 
The Camargue is not going to disappear tomorrow; however, it is experiencing new developments, due to the effects of global change.
 
It is up to policy makers and site managers, on the basis of the tools developed and the knowledge acquired, to formulate and implement strategies to adapt to these changes and enable us to anticipate and evolve with them in a way that will make human activities less vulnerable.
 
Finally, it is up to all of us to create an ongoing dialogue between scientists, site managers, and policy makers, and to keep local citizens informed.