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Displaying 11 - 20 of 21 results found
  • Publications

    ICPDR Sturgeon Strategy 2017 (1.3 MB)

    ICPDR’s sturgeon conservation activities are strongly linked to the new EU Biodiversity Strategy.
  • Content pages

    Sturgeons in the Danube Basin

    Sturgeons are sensitive to environmental pressures and therefore valuable indicators for healthy rivers. This is why the ICPDR has endorsed sturgeons as flagship species. There are six species of sturgeons native in the Danube River Basin, but the survival of these ancient fish is threatened by a range of issues. Through the "Danube Sturgeon Task Force", the ICPDR contributes to actions such as the protection of habitats, the development of migration aids, the breeding of healthy stocks in sheltered facilities, or the struggle against illegal fishing and caviar trade.

  • News & Media 17 December 2013

    Public Participation: Interim Overview on Significant Water Management Issues

    Vienna, 17 Dec 2013. The ICPDR provides an interim overview on Significant Water Management Issues in the Danube River Basin District for the 2nd Danube River Basin Management Plan (2nd DRBMP) and invites the public to comment on this document until June 2014.

  • Publications

    Interim Overview Significant Water Management Issues in DRBD (527.76 KB)

  • Sturgeon 2020 (581.02 KB)

    A program for protection and rehabilitation of Danube sturgeons - by the Danube Sturgeon Task Force
  • Publications

    Measures for ensuring fish migration at transverse structures (1.03 MB)

  • Public Participation Schedule WFD & EFD (74.21 KB)

  • Maps & Data

    DBA 2004 - Map 16: Protected Areas (2.95 MB)

    Important Water-related Protected Areas for Species and Habitat Protection Layers: Areas for species and habitat protection (< 10,000 ha, 10,000 - 50,000 ha, > 50,000 ha), Transboundary co-operation
  • Content pages

    Plants & Animals

    The habitats created by the Danube and its tributaries host a unique mix of species. But many habitats are degraded by man-made changes to the river profile and width, water depth and flow velocity following the construction of dams, weirs and canals. Many migratory fish including sturgeon species and the Danube Salmon are endangered or close to extinction by being disconnected from their spawning grounds and habitats or by being over-exploited.

  • Content pages

    Ecosystems

    A river does not end at its bank. The Danube and its tributaries form many diverse riverine habitats, including intricate networks of water bodies, creeks and channels, floodplain forests, water meadows, lakes, gravel islands, sandy banks and the unique delta habitats by the shores of the Black Sea.