4.8 Article

Century-long records reveal shifting challenges to seagrass recovery

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 3, 页码 563-575

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15440

关键词

light requirement; long‐ term trends; management; multiple pressures; Zostera marina

资金

  1. Danish Ministry of Environment and Food
  2. European Union
  3. Danish Research Council
  4. Danish Council for Strategic Research
  5. Danish Center for the Environment
  6. Velux Foundation
  7. European Union H2020

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Eelgrass ecosystems have been threatened by eutrophication and deterioration of the light environment over the 20th century, leading to major declines in Western Baltic Sea meadows despite efforts to reduce nutrient input. Shallow colonization depths and increasing light requirements for eelgrass suggest that recovery is limited by additional stressors. Bottom trawling and warming continue to suppress eelgrass recovery, with future management needing to address these challenges to increase resilience and limit warming by meeting global climate change goals.
Global losses over the 20th century placed seagrass ecosystems among the most threatened ecosystems in the world, with eutrophication, and associated deterioration of the submarine light environment identified as the main driver. Growing appreciation of the ecological and societal benefits of healthy seagrass meadows has stimulated efforts to protect and restore them, largely focused on reducing nutrient input to coastal waters. Here we analyze a unique data set spanning 135 years on eelgrass (Zostera marina), the dominant seagrass of the northern hemisphere. We show that meadows in the Western Baltic Sea exhibited major declines relative to historic (1890-1910) reference due to the wasting disease in the 1930s followed by eutrophication peaking in the 1980s, but have only shown modest improvement despite major eutrophication mitigation, halving nitrogen input since the 1980s. Across the past century, we identified generally shallower colonization depths of eelgrass for a given submarine light penetration and, hence, increased apparent light requirements. This suggests that eelgrass recovery is limited by additional stressors. Our study indicates that bottom trawling and intense recent warming (0.5 degrees C per decade, 1985-2018), which impact on deeper and shallower meadows, respectively, suppress eelgrass from fully recovering from eutrophication. Warming is most severe in shallow turbid waters, while clear-water areas offer eelgrass refugia from warming in deeper, cooler waters; but trawling can prevent eelgrass from reaching these refugia. Efforts to reduce nutrient input and thereby improve water clarity have been instrumental in avoiding a catastrophic loss of eelgrass ecosystems. However, local-scale future management must, in addition, reduce bottom trawling to facilitate eelgrass reaching deeper, cooler refugia, and increase resilience toward realized and further warming. Warming needs to be limited by meeting global climate change mitigation goals.

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