TY - JOUR
T1 - Charting a course for freshwater biomonitoring: The grand challenges identified by the global scientific community
AU - Yates, Adam G.
AU - B. Brua , Robert
AU - Culp, Joseph M.
AU - Aguiar, Francisca C.
AU - Aspin, Thomas W.H.
AU - Bundschuh, Mirco
AU - R. Calderón, Mirian
AU - Csabai , Zoltán
AU - Dallas, Helen
AU - Datry, Thibault
AU - Dias-Silva, Karina
AU - Dzavi, Jean
AU - England, Judy
AU - Erös, Tibor
AU - Gebler , Daniel
AU - Goedkoop, Willem
AU - González-Ferreras , Alexia Maria
AU - Hamilton, David
AU - Hughes, Robert M.
AU - Juen, Leandro
AU - KEFFORD, Ben
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The past 50 years have seen biomonitoring emerge as an essential means of generating the knowledge needed to inform protection and restoration of freshwater ecosystems. Despite the successes of biomonitoring, most freshwater ecosystems remain unmonitored. Moreover, degradation of freshwaters continues at a rapid rate with new threats and novel stressors emerging that are difficult to assess using existing techniques. New technologies and techniques have been developed to improve biomonitoring, but application has been slow and integration with existing approaches is often problematic. Clearly, freshwater biomonitoring faces many important challenges that must be addressed to meet management needs of the coming decades. We identify Grand Challenges facing freshwater biomonitoring with the aim of encouraging research and practice to address these challenges. We asked 256 biomonitoring scientists from around the globe to identify what they considered the most important challenges. From their submissions we established five Grand Challenges and 18 associated subchallenges. For each Grand Challenge, we outline the current state of biomonitoring practice and suggest promising pathways and approaches to address them. By identifying and describing these challenges, we strive to position freshwater biomonitoring to take advantage of emerging opportunities and enhance its capacity to meet current and future management needs.
AB - The past 50 years have seen biomonitoring emerge as an essential means of generating the knowledge needed to inform protection and restoration of freshwater ecosystems. Despite the successes of biomonitoring, most freshwater ecosystems remain unmonitored. Moreover, degradation of freshwaters continues at a rapid rate with new threats and novel stressors emerging that are difficult to assess using existing techniques. New technologies and techniques have been developed to improve biomonitoring, but application has been slow and integration with existing approaches is often problematic. Clearly, freshwater biomonitoring faces many important challenges that must be addressed to meet management needs of the coming decades. We identify Grand Challenges facing freshwater biomonitoring with the aim of encouraging research and practice to address these challenges. We asked 256 biomonitoring scientists from around the globe to identify what they considered the most important challenges. From their submissions we established five Grand Challenges and 18 associated subchallenges. For each Grand Challenge, we outline the current state of biomonitoring practice and suggest promising pathways and approaches to address them. By identifying and describing these challenges, we strive to position freshwater biomonitoring to take advantage of emerging opportunities and enhance its capacity to meet current and future management needs.
KW - Develop protocols Construct infrastructure Holistic ecological context Empower communities Ensure FAIR data
KW - Holistic ecological context
KW - Develop protocols
KW - Empower communities
KW - Ensure FAIR data
KW - Construct infrastructure
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X2500576X
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007423121&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2025.113646
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolind.2025.113646
M3 - Article
SN - 1872-7034
VL - 176
SP - 1
EP - 6
JO - Ecological Indicators
JF - Ecological Indicators
M1 - 113646
ER -