Human Disturbance of Karst Environments

Philip E. van Beynen, Kaya van Beynen, Philip Van Beynen

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Karst environments have been impacted by human activity for thousands of years, ever since people started living in caves for shelter, needing building supplies and water. As human population has increased, so has its disturbance of the karst landscape. Quarrying, pollution, groundwater extraction, construction, and agriculture are the major culprits for disturbing both surface and subsurface karst. Ecosystems in this type of environment have been shown to be quite vulnerable to human activities. Methods to quantify this disturbance, such as the karst disturbance index, have been created to help resource managers formulate approaches to reduce this anthropogenic impact. In addition, models to measure karst vulnerability, in particular karst aquifers, have grown in number over the last two decades. When measuring human disturbance, it is important to consider matters of time and scale, as both will influence how and what data is collected.

Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationKarst Management
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2011

Keywords

  • Human Disturbance
  • Karst Aquifer
  • Karst Area
  • Groundwater Vulnerability
  • Karst System

Disciplines

  • Earth Sciences

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