Drylands zones are limited by soil moisture, the result of low rainfall and high evaporation, and show a gradient of increasing primary productivity, ranging from hyper-arid, arid, and semiarid to dry subhumid areas.
(Milennium ecossystem, 2005).

SIL International Congress, Special Session: “Ecology, management and conservation of temporary water bodies”

Inland Waters, Volume 10 (4), 2020.


SIL International Congress, Special Session: “Ecology, management and conservation of temporary water bodies”
About
The proposed International Network on Limnology of Drylands is to be a network engaged in promoting the construction of macro-scale projects designed to obtain an understanding of the functioning and conservation patterns of aquatic ecosystems in international dry regions through the multidisciplinary integration of research, research groups and researchers of such regions.
Who we are?
Members are researchers associated to the network and committed to its development and to scientific research associated to the network. The role of the members embraces participation in, and co-management of local experiments and research activities that lie within the sphere of INLD objectives, committing themselves to input the data they generate to the network database and to involve themselves in projects and the joint production of manuscripts with other network members.
Meetings
The INLD was discussed for the first time during the Symposium of Brazilian Semiarid Limnology, held in Areia (Paraíba state, Brazil) in 2016.
Next meetings:
- Special Session in Shallow lakes Conference: Ecology of temporary ecosystems
https://shallowlakes2020.com.br/#about
-SIL Congress: http://sil2020.org/
News
Advances in limnological research in Earth's drylands, the main role of INLD
News
Transforming our world: the 2030 agenda for Sustainable Development
Publications
Last publications to date
INLD Working group

INLD SPECIAL ISSUE
The INLD Network and SIL Working Group Limnology of Drylands was discussed for the first time during the I Symposium of Brazilian Semiarid Limnology, held in Areia (Paraíba state, Brazil) in 2016, by the Luciana Barbosa initiative. Among the main objectives, to encourage cooperation among multidisciplinary researchers interested in investigating environmental issues in aquatic ecosystems in the world's drylands. Among the main perspectives, the effects of climate change and human stressors.
See: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/20442041.2020.1728179
RAMSAR CONVENTION
Since the Convention on Wetlands, signed in 1971 in Ramsar (Iran), the conservation and sustainable use of temporary waters has been attracting attention by mean of national actions and international cooperation. Environmental changes, driven either by natural or anthropogenic disturbances, have been threating the biodiversity of innumerable intermittent and ephemeral aquatic systems around the world such as swamps, rock pools, wetland ponds, lakes, reservoirs, streams, rivers, saltwater ponds, estuaries, and shallow coastal waters in drylands.