The purpose of the investment project BTH-NIB is the assurance of the appropriate infrastructural conditions for the use of research and developmental opportunities in the fields of operation of the NIB.
Play Video About project PublicationProject coordinator: Dr. David Stanković
Code: J1-50016
Duration: 1. 10. 2023 - 30. 9. 2026
MULTI-MON: Development of multimodal biodiversity monitoring for (small) wetlands – combining non-invasive underwater soundscape and eDNA-scape profiles
Biodiversity decline urgently requires efficient, large-scale monitoring programs to identify trends and guide management. Conventional programs have a number of limitations and do not deliver sufficient information to guide effective conservation planning. In this respect, the introduction of novel tools to biomonitoring has the potential to reduce the amount of fieldwork required to survey a given area, and on the other hand can provide more informative and comprehensive data sets.
Wetlands are the most threatened ecosystem on Earth, and their protection and restoration is an integral part of several international conventions. Updating and continuously improving inventories and biodiversity monitoring at wetlands to ensure contributions to species recovery is listed among the urgent priorities for wetland restoration. Hitherto, freshwater research has been largely focused on flowing waters and larger water bodies, with significant gaps in understanding, monitoring, and protecting smaller stagnant freshwater wetlands. These support a greater biodiversity than any other freshwater habitat, harbor many endangered taxa, act as important biodiversity refuges in heavily modified landscapes, and provide important ecosystem services.
To address global threats causing declines in freshwater biodiversity, fill gaps in conventional biomonitoring of small wetlands, and enable an effective, research-led conservation and management that is based on more comprehensive quantitative and qualitative data over a larger number of taxa, larger areas, and longer periods, the use of technological advances and pioneering approaches is needed.
The main objective of the proposed research project MULTI-MON is to develop tools for next-generation multi-modal biodiversity assessment and monitoring of small wetlands. Our research will develop, test, and implement novel technologies for characterization of their underwater ecoacoustic expression and assess their environmental genetic profiles with comprehensive eDNA analyses.
A series of carefully planned laboratory experiments and extensive field studies in three pilot areas in different biogeographic regions are envisaged. Within three interconnected work packages of the project MULTI-MON we will:
In the project MULTI-MON we will combine state-of-the-art knowledge from ecology, conservation genetics, biomonitoring, behavioral ecology, and computational audio processing to create a framework for non-invasive multi-modal biodiversity monitoring of small stagnant freshwater wetlands using underwater sound-, vibro-, and eDNA-scape profiles. Comparison of conventional biodiversity assessment with non-invasive novel underwater soundscape and eDNA-scape approaches and their synthesis will facilitate more efficient biodiversity monitoring of these ecosystems.Planned project outreach encompasses publications in leading journals, attendance at international conferences, dissemination to the public, and publicly accessible acoustic and DNA databases. Overarching dissemination targeting future applicability involves presentation of the next-generation multi-modal biomonitoring of aquatic ecosystems to the key stakeholders responsible for national monitoring schemes.
Basic information about the project (SICRIS)