Julien Pétillon
Top ten priorities for global saltmarsh restoration, conservation and ecosystem service research
Pétillon, Julien; McKinley, Emma; Alexander, Meghan; Adams, Janine B; Angelini, Christine; Balke, Thorsten; Griffin, John N; Bouma, Tjeerd; Hacker, Sally; He, Qiang; Hensel, Marc J S; Ibáñez, Carles; Macreadie, Peter I; Martino, Simone; Sharps, Elwyn; Ballinger, Rhoda; de Battisti, Davide; Beaumont, Nicola; Burdon, Daryl; Daleo, Pedro; D'Alpaos, Andrea; Duggan-Edwards, Mollie; Garbutt, Angus; Jenkins, Stuart; Ladd, Cai J T; Lewis, Heather; Mariotti, Giulio; McDermott, Osgur; Mills, Rachael; Möller, Iris; Nolte, Stefanie; Pagès, Jordi F; Silliman, Brian; Zhang, Liquan; Skov, Martin W
Authors
Emma McKinley
Dr MEGHAN ALEXANDER Meghan.Alexander@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
Janine B Adams
Christine Angelini
Thorsten Balke
John N Griffin
Tjeerd Bouma
Sally Hacker
Qiang He
Marc J S Hensel
Carles Ibáñez
Peter I Macreadie
Simone Martino
Elwyn Sharps
Rhoda Ballinger
Davide de Battisti
Nicola Beaumont
Daryl Burdon
Pedro Daleo
Andrea D'Alpaos
Mollie Duggan-Edwards
Angus Garbutt
Stuart Jenkins
Cai J T Ladd
Heather Lewis
Giulio Mariotti
Osgur McDermott
Rachael Mills
Iris Möller
Stefanie Nolte
Jordi F Pagès
Brian Silliman
Liquan Zhang
Martin W Skov
Abstract
Coastal saltmarshes provide globally important ecosystem services including ‘blue carbon’ sequestration, flood protection, pollutant remediation, habitat provision and cultural value. Large portions of marshes have been lost or fragmented as a result of land reclamation, embankment construction, and pollution. Sea level rise threatens marsh survival by blocking landward migration where coastlines have been developed. Research-informed saltmarsh conservation and restoration efforts are helping to prevent further loss, yet significant knowledge gaps remain. Using a mixed methods approach, this paper identifies ten research priorities through an online questionnaire and a residential workshop attended by an international, multi-disciplinary network of 35 saltmarsh experts spanning natural, physical and social sciences across research, policy, and practitioner sectors. Priorities have been grouped under four thematic areas of research: Saltmarsh Area Extent, Change and Restoration Potential (including past, present, global variation), Spatio-social contexts of Ecosystem Service delivery (e.g. influences of environmental context, climate change, and stakeholder groups on service provisioning), Patterns and Processes in saltmarsh functioning (global drivers of saltmarsh ecosystem structure/function) and Management and Policy Needs (how management varies contextually; challenges/opportunities for management). Although not intended to be exhaustive, the challenges, opportunities, and strategies for addressing each research priority examined here, providing a blueprint of the work that needs to be done to protect saltmarshes for future generations.
Citation
Pétillon, J., McKinley, E., Alexander, M., Adams, J. B., Angelini, C., Balke, T., Griffin, J. N., Bouma, T., Hacker, S., He, Q., Hensel, M. J. S., Ibáñez, C., Macreadie, P. I., Martino, S., Sharps, E., Ballinger, R., de Battisti, D., Beaumont, N., Burdon, D., Daleo, P., …Skov, M. W. (2023). Top ten priorities for global saltmarsh restoration, conservation and ecosystem service research. Science of the Total Environment, 898, Article 165544. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165544
Journal Article Type | Review |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Jul 12, 2023 |
Online Publication Date | Jul 13, 2023 |
Publication Date | Nov 10, 2023 |
Deposit Date | Aug 4, 2023 |
Publicly Available Date | Jul 14, 2024 |
Journal | Science of the Total Environment |
Print ISSN | 0048-9697 |
Electronic ISSN | 1879-1026 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 898 |
Article Number | 165544 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165544 |
Keywords | Saltmarsh conservation and restoration; Ecosystem services; Global variation; Socio-ecological interactions; Research priorities |
Public URL | https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/23846517 |
Publisher URL | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969723041670?dgcid=coauthor |
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