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  • 3 NINE GEO-MORPHOLOGICAL DANUBE REACHES (1.84 MB)

  • 1 INTRODUCTION, 2 PREPARATION FOR THE SURVEY (184.14 KB)

    1.1 The Danube River Protection Convention - Its Role in the Protection of the Danube River 1.2 Assessment of Water Quality in the Danube River Basin - the Need for and the Aims of the Joint Danube...
  • TABLE OF CONTENTS (107.21 KB)

  • Foreword (127.13 KB)

  • JDS Technical Report (Cover) (498.2 KB)

    JOINT DANUBE SURVEYTechnical Report of the International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River September 2002
  • Content pages

    Joint Danube Survey 1

    The Joint Danube Survey 2001 was carried out by the ICPDR and is the most homogenous analysis of the water quality and the ecological status of the Danube River. Over 140 chemical and biological parameters were analysed and over 40.000 laboratory results were generated.

  • Content pages

    TNMN - TransNational Monitoring Network

    The TransNational Monitoring Network is an important tool under the Danube River Protection Convention (DRPC), whose Contracting Parties are committed to co-operate in the field of monitoring and assessment. Formally launched in 1996, the TNMN aims to provide a well-balanced overall view of pollution and long-term trends in water quality and pollution loads in the major rivers in the Danube River Basin.

  • Content pages

    Croatia

    With a national territory of 87,609 km2, Croatia is at the intersection of the Pannonian Plain, the Balkans and the Adriatic. The country straddles the border of two major catchment areas: the Danube Basin and the Adriatic Sea. Draining over 62% of Croatia’s mainland, the Danube Basin covers the northern and central inland section of the country and is home to 69% of the population. Croatian territory accounts for 4.4% of the entire Danube Basin.

  • Content pages

    Invasive Alien Species

    The Danube River is seeing an influx of new non-native species, stemming from the increasing interconnections with various European and global water bodies via canals and other waterways designed to facilitate navigation. It is currently believed that alien species are very likely to become even more significant in the future, as the importance of the Danube as an international waterway increases.

  • Content pages

    Bosnia-Herzegovina

    The waters of Bosnia and Herzegovina are split between the Danube River Basin District and the Adriatic Sea Basin. Some 40.2% of the Sava river sub-basin, the second largest sub-basin of the Danube River Basin, lies in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The rest of the watershed is shared by Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia.