The Cultural Ecohydrogeology of Mediterranean-Climate Springs: A Global Review with Case Studies

Author

Pascual, Roger

Piana, Lucia

Ullah Bhat, Sami

Fidel Castro, Pedro

Corbera, Jordi

Cummings, Dion

Delgado, Cristina

Eades, Eugene

Fensham, Roderick J.

Fernández-Martínez, Marcos

Ferreira, Verónica

Filippini, Maria

García, Guillermo

Gargini, Alessandro

Hopper, Stephen D.

Knapp, Lynette

Lewis, Ian D.

Peñuelas, Josep

Preece, Catherine

Publication date

2024-05-27



Abstract

Cultures in Mediterranean climate zones (MCZs) around the world have long been reliant on groundwater and springs as freshwater sources. While their ecology and cultural sustainability are recognized as critically important, inter-relationships between springs and culture in MCZs have received less attention. Here we augmented a global literature review with case studies in MCZ cultural landscapes to examine the diversity and intensity of cultural and socio-economic relationships on spring ecohydrogeology. MCZs are often oriented on western and southern coasts in tectonically active landscapes which control aquifer structure, the prevalence of westerly winds, and aridity, and generally expose associated habitats and cultures to harsh afternoon sunlight. Cultural appreciation and appropriation of springs ranges widely, from their use as subsistence water supplies to their roles in profound traditions such as Greco-Roman nymphalea as well as Asian and Abrahamic spiritual cleansing and baptism. The abandonment of traditional ways of life, such as rural livestock production, for urban ones has shifted impacts on aquifers from local to regional groundwater exploitation. The commoditization of water resources for regional agricultural, industrial (e.g., mining, water bottling, geothermal resorts), and urban uses is placing ever-increasing unsustainable demands on aquifers and spring ecosystems. When the regional economic value of springs approaches or exceeds local cultural values, these irreplaceable aquatic ecosystems are often degraded, over-looked, and lost. Sustainable stewardship of springs and the aquifers that support them is a poorly recognized but central conservation challenge for modern Mediterranean societies as they face impending impacts of global climate change. Solutions to this crisis require education, societal dialogue, and improved policy and implementation.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

572 - Physical anthropology

Pages

85

Publisher

MDPI

Version of

Environments

Grant Agreement Number

EC/ERC/101076740/EU/Elemental Ecology: towards an element-based functional ecology/STOIKOS

MICINN/ /RYC2021-031511-I/ES/ /

MICIU/Programa Estatal de generación del conocimiento y fortalecimiento científico y tecnológico del sistema I+D+I/CEX2018-000828-S/ES/ /

MICINN/Programa Estatal para impulsar la investigación científico-técnica y su transferencia/PID2021-128778OA-I00/ES/Caracterización de los vínculos entre el ciclo del agua y los ciclos N-P-K en un mundo cada vez más cálido/KALORET

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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