Horizon scan of conservation issues for inland waters in Canada

Abstract

Horizon scanning is a systematic approach increasingly used to explore emerging trends, issues, opportunities, and threats in conservation. We present the results from one such exercise aimed at identifying emerging issues that could have important scientific, social, technological, and managerial implications for the conservation of inland waters in Canada in the proximate future. We recognized six opportunities and nine challenges, for which we provide research implications and policy options, such that scientists, policy makers, and the Canadian society as a whole can prepare for a potential growth in each of the topic areas we identified. The issues spanned a broad range of topics, from recognizing the opportunities and challenges of community-enabled science and the need to consider the legal rights of nature, to the likely increase of pharmaceuticals in wastewater due to an aging population. These issues represent a first baseline that could help decision makers identify and prioritize efforts while simultaneously stimulate new research avenues. We hope our horizon scan will pave the way for similar exercises related to the conservation of biodiversity in Canada.This project was organized with the support of the Groupe de recherche Interuniversitaire en Limnologie, and the Liber Ero Chair at McGill University. IGE, RB, MC, SJC, AH acknowledge support from the Canada Research Chairs program, and KG, CB and NSG acknowledge funding from the NSERC-funded LakePulse Network. WJS is funded by Arcadia. The authors also thank Sara Pancheri for developing Figure 1a. Finally, we would like to thank Amanda K. Winegardner, who was an active participant in the workshop and provided substantial edits and comments of the manuscript

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