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Search publications of the members of the Royal Belgian institute of natural Sciences

Inbook Reference Mode d'inhumation et gestion de l'espace funéraire dans le quartier Saint-Michel de Toulouse au cours de la Peste noire
Article Reference Funerary practices and monuments at Hierapolis of Phrygia. The Roman and Byzantine tombs in the sanctuary of St Philipp
Article Reference Namur/Namur : occupations préhistoriques, sanctuaire gallo-romain et urbanisation médiévale au confluent Sambre-et-Meuse. Suite de l’opération d’archéologie préventive au Grognon (janvier-août 2018)
Article Reference Enabling Renewable Energy While Protecting Wildlife: An Ecological Risk-Based Approach to Wind Energy Development Using Ecosystem-Based Management Values
Acceptance of wind energy development is challenged by stakeholders’ concerns about potential effects on the environment, specifically on wildlife, such as birds, bats, and (for offshore wind) marine animals, and the habitats that support them. Communities near wind energy developments are also concerned with social and economic impacts, as well as impacts on aesthetics, historical sites, and recreation and tourism. Lack of a systematic, widely accepted, and balanced approach for measuring the potential damage to wildlife, habitats, and communities continues to leave wind developers, regulators, and other stakeholders in an uncertain position. This paper explores ecological risk-based management (RBM) in wind energy development for land-based and offshore wind installations. This paper provides a framework for the adaptation of ecosystem-based management to wind energy development and examines that framework through a series of case studies and best management practices for applying risk-based principles to wind energy. Ten case studies indicate that wind farm monitoring is often driven by regulatory requirements that may not be underpinned by scientific questions. While each case applies principles of adaptive management, there is room for improvement in applying scientific principles to the data collection and analysis. Challenges and constraints for wind farm development to meet RBM framework criteria include collecting sufficient baseline and monitoring data year-round, engaging stakeholder facilitators, and bringing together large and diverse scientific teams. The RBM framework approach may provide insights for improved siting and consenting/permitting processes for regulators and their advisors, particularly in those nations where wind energy is still in the early development stages on land or at sea.
Article Reference Offshore Wind Energy and Benthic Habitat Changes: Lessons from Block Island Wind Farm
Article Reference Operationalizing risk-based cumulative effect assessments in the marine environment
Ecosystem-based management requires an assessment of the cumulative effects of human pressures and environmental change. The operationalization and integration of cumulative effects assessments (CEA) into decision-making processes often lacks a comprehensive and transparent framework. A risk-based CEA framework that divides a CEA in risk identification, risk analysis and risk evaluation, could structure such complex analyses and facilitate the establishment of direct science-policy links. Here, we examine carefully the operationalization of such a risk-based CEA framework with the help of eleven contrasting case studies located in Europe, French Polynesia, and Canada. We show that the CEA framework used at local, sub-regional, and regional scales allowed for a consistent, coherent, and transparent comparison of complex assessments. From our analysis, we pinpoint four emerging issues that, if accurately addressed, can improve the take up of CEA outcomes by management: 1) framing of the CEA context and defining risk criteria; 2) describing the roles of scientists and decision-makers; 3) reducing and structuring complexity; and 4) communicating uncertainty. Moreover, with a set of customized tools we describe and analyze for each case study the nature and location of uncertainty as well as trade-offs regarding available knowledge and data used for the CEA. Ultimately, these tools aid decision-makers to recognize potential caveats and repercussions of management decisions. One key recommendation is to differentiate CEA processes and their context in relation to governance advice, marine spatial planning or regulatory advice. We conclude that future research needs to evaluate how effective management measures are in reducing the risk of cumulative effects. Changing governance structures takes time and is often difficult, but we postulate that well-framed and structured CEA can function as a strategic tool to integrate ecosystem considerations across multiple sectorial policies.
Article Reference Diagenetic control on secondary porosity in flood plain deposits: an example of the Lower Triassic of northeastern Belgium
Article Reference Subsurface facies analysis of the Namurian and earliest Westphalian in the western part of the Campine Basin (N Belgium)
Article Reference Lithology and biostratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous - Paleocene carbonates in the Molenbeersel borehole (NE Belgium)
Article Reference Crustal structure of the London-Brabant Massif, southern North Sea
Article Reference A new look at Belgian aeromagnetic and gravity data through image-based display and integrated modelling techniques
Article Reference Petrophysical stratigraphy of the Namurian and lowermost Westphalian in the western part of the Campine basin
Article Reference Instortingsholten op de Keizersberg te Leuven
Article Reference Late Devonian - Early Carboniferous miospores from the Menen borehole, Namur Synclinorium, Belgium
Article Reference Triassic carbonates as the host rock for karstification: Tenglong cave and the Lichuan karst (West Hubei, China)
Article Reference Stratigraphy and tectonics of the Roer Valley Graben
Inbook Reference Overview of the influence of syn-sedimentary tectonics and palaeo-fluvial systems on coal seam and sand body characteristics in the Westphalian C strata, Campine basin, Belgium
Article Reference Rédécouverte en Région de Bruxelles-Capitale du rare carabidé endogé Anillus caecus Jacquelin Du Val, 1851 au Jardin botanique Jean Massart grâce à la technique du lavage de terre (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Trechninae, Bembidiini, Anillina)
Article Reference Two new stick insect genera from Vietnam, Nuichua gen. nov. and Pterohirasea gen. nov. with two new species (Phasmida: Diapheromeridae: Necrosciinae)
Article Reference Twenty years for Zootaxa and ten years for Afromoths (Lepidoptera): a taxonomic interaction between the journal and an online relational database
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