4.2 Article

Genetic effects of eelgrass restoration efforts by fishers' seeding to recover seagrass beds as an important natural capital for coastal ecosystem services

Journal

POPULATION ECOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 1, Pages 92-101

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/1438-390X.12073

Keywords

ecosystem management; microsatellite DNA; seagrass; seeding; Zostera marina

Categories

Funding

  1. Environment Research and Technology Development Fund [JPMEERF16S11513]
  2. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries (MAFF)

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The study found that restored seagrass beds in the study area have high genetic diversity comparable to natural ones. Multiple regression analysis revealed that a combined model of seedling intensity and geographic distance better explained genetic structure across the sampling sites, supporting that the eelgrass seeds sowed by fishers did not disturb genetic structure but rather supplemented natural dispersal. This suggests that fishers' seeding efforts did not develop nonnatural seagrass meadows but contributed to the recovery of natural seagrass meadows.
The reestablishment of seagrass vegetation is a vital part of recovering coastal marine ecosystem services. Historically the Hinase area was a famous for the fishing by coastal pound netting in eelgrass beds, but this practice was progressively displaced with oyster farming due to an enormous decline in seagrass vegetation. For several decades, the local fishers' cooperative has worked to restore eelgrass beds by a seeding method. Through these efforts, seagrass vegetation in their fishing area has increased to about half of their previous area. This study examined the effect of long-term seeding by fishers on the recovery of eelgrass beds in the Hinase area, based on analysis of eelgrass genetic structure using microsatellite markers. Specimens for the DNA analysis were collected from each of all eelgrass meadows that the fishers conducted sowing eelgrass seeds as well as from the source sites where they collected the seeds. The results found that restored beds in the study area have high genetic diversity comparable to natural ones. The multiple regression analysis revealed that a combined model of seedling intensity and geographic distance (R-2 = .457) better explained genetic structure across our sampling sites than models of seedling intensity (R-2 = .092) or geographic distance only (R-2 = .344). This supports that the eelgrass seeds they sowed did not disturb the genetic structure but rather supplemented natural dispersal, suggesting that the fishers' seeding did not develop nonnatural seagrass meadows but certainly contributed to the recovery of natural seagrass meadows.

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