The SEAREG project is developing a standard methodology to promote the growth of macroalgae in artificial substrates with algae of the genus Cystoseira, "seeding" them in structures that mimic natural reefs.
A team from the Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid (ICMM-CSIC) is working on a method to decontaminate and recover organic compounds from industrial aqueous media using a MOF network of imidazolates (imidazole-derived compounds) as zeolites. These particles are capable of self-aggregating to generate floating membranes. The technology, with a European priority patent application, is available for demonstration at laboratory level.
Geosciences Barcelona (GEO3BCN-CSIC) is studying how rising temperatures and droughts in the Catalan Pyrenees may alter the hydrogeological balance of caves, caverns and grottoes. To do so, they will analyse the cavern pearls, calcareous formations that have been, to date, practically unexplored. It is an exploratory study on a virtually unknown natural heritage.
The Undammed project studies the impact of dams removal on river networks and ecosystems. These structures can be a source of methane emissions with a significant climate impact. In the last years, Europe has initiated a river restoration strategy by removing such dams, especially those no higher than 10 metres. But little is yet known about the effects on the carbon cycle of the river network once the dam has been removed.
The first Spanish group of experts on blue carbon ecosystems (G3ECA) has been created with the aim of protecting aquatic coastal vegetation. Blue carbon refers to the CO2 that is sequestered by coastal ecosystems, basically seagrass meadows, mangroves and salt marshes. Although they cover less than 2% of the sea surface, they bury up to 50% of marine carbon in their sediments and can retain it for millennia. We talk to Miguel Ángel Mateo, a CSIC researcher at the Centre for Advanced Studies in Blanes (CEAB) and coordinator of G3ECA together with Fernando Brun (University of Cádiz).
Laura Recasens is a researcher in the Marine Living Resources Ecology and Conservation research group at the Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC), a group that aims to provide a scientific basis for the sustainable use and conservation of living marine resources and their habitats.
The LIFE Spot project, aimed at developing innovative solutions for the denitrification of groundwater, has been completed. The results include a combination of low-cost technologies, microalgae and cork, which can remove up to 99% of nitrates and 73% of pesticides from water. This solution could benefit an estimated 20 million people living in rural areas of Europe.
The Chemistry Laboratory of the Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC) offers a Nutrient Analysis Service to institutions and companies, where they analyse the main nutrients in water. Specifically, they measure the concentration of inorganic nutrients (nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, phosphate, and silicate), total nitrogen and phosphorus, and total and dissolved organic carbon.
A team of experts has published A Roadmap for Ethical Rewilding in the Anthropocene, the first guide that identifies the moral challenges when returning wildlife to a territory and provides reflections to point out the opportunities and minimise the conflicts that may arise.
- Coffee sacks and pruning waste for wastewater treatment
- A plant-derived material can clean water contaminated by metals and persistent compounds with high efficiency
- Bacteria in nutrient-rich environments reduce their genes (and why knowing this is helpful in biomedicine and bioapplications)
- Renewable energy or biodiversity: the BIOPAIS project analyses potential impacts of Mediterranean wind farms
- Bioluminescent bacteria and algae for illuminating cities