GRECO has significantly advanced the state-of-the-art of coastal groundwater studies by i) demonstrating the relevance of water recirculation through sediments as a net nutrient source, ii) documenting groundwater-ecological links in coastal ecosystems, and iii) adding new tools (stable isotope signature) and improving current approaches (radon, salinity and temperature modeling) for studies of groundwater processes and their ecological implications. The results obtained in GRECO concern thus a broad scientific community, including hydrologists, biogeochemists, ecologists, oceanographers and other scientists working on coastal processes.
Outcomes of GRECO are also of great interest for agents involved in lagoon management and use (either for leisure or commercial purposes), and have been directly communicated to these end users through regular interactions and through the participation of resource managers in the project. The newly acquired understanding of coastal processes will allow better responding the urgent need of developing integrated sustainable management of coastal hydrological and ecological resources, in particular with regards to EU regulatory frameworks (specifically the Water Framework and Habitat Directives).