 Field trip in Danube Delta
Field trip in Danube Delta
   
The field trip will take place on the Danube Delta. The interested  participants should register for field trip at on-line registration and pay the  field trip fee together with conference fee. The field trip fee includes transport and lunch costs. 
    The actual area of Danube Delta is 4,455 square kilometers and most of it spreads on Romania`s territory, i.e. 3510 km square (84%). The former Halmyris bay area, where Razim-Sinoie lake was grafted, is, 1,015 square km (of which lakes represent 863 square km). Together, the two geographical units have an area of 5470 square kilometers.
   
    
     
     
    According to many Romanian and foreign scientists, the Danube Delta  was formed in a bay of the Black Sea starting in Upper Pleistocene. At this  stage a coastal belt was sketched, called the "initial belt", which  was considered to have started in the center, in 16,000 BC and continued until  7,500 BC. The formation of this initial belt, which corresponds to the central  axis of the Jibrieni, Letea, Caraorman and Crasnicol banks alignment, closed  the bay, turning it into a lagoon. Delta was evolved in close connection with  the three arms – St. Gheorghe, Sulina and Chilia. The three arms have different  ages, the oldest being St. Gheorghe, in the South and the youngest, in the  North, named Chilia.     The differentiation of the delta area, from the first bifurcation to  the seashore and between the main arms, is the result of a long-time evolution  that led to the formation of levees, lakes, streams and amphibious land, and  respectively, ecosystem. Science the delta ecosystems are in close interaction,  all influenced by Danube River, and the solar energy, this abiotic ensemble is  considered a system, an over-ecosystem level of matter organization.  As a  young region continuing to grow, the Danube Delta is a favorable place for  developing a unique flora and fauna in Europa, with many rare species. Due to  its predominant aquatic environment, the fauna and flora will therefore be  aquatic, although the terrestrial environment is also presented, represented by  the Letea, Caraorman, Stipoc, Saraturile and Campul Chiliei levees, dry area  that enable the developing of flora and fauna specific to Eastern European  steppes with Mediterranean influences.     Between these two environments (aquatic and terrestrial), the swamp, flooding  environment is interposing, being the carrier of a flora and fauna, with  possibilities of alternative adaptation (water, land), depending on the  seasonal and annual hydrologic regime. At the contact point of the freshwater and  the sea water, outstanding physical, chemical and biological processes occur,  prompting biologists to consider these coastal waters as a special ecosystem,  called “avandelta”. Musura Bay and Meleaua Sfantu Gheorghe are most  representative in this type of ecosystem.
 
     
    
    

