Habitat recovery and restoration in aquatic ecosystems: current progress and future challenges

被引:221
|
作者
Geist, Juergen [1 ]
Hawkins, Stephen J. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Aquat Syst Biol Unit, Munich, Germany
[2] Univ Southampton, Natl Oceanog Ctr, Ocean & Earth Sci, Southampton, Hants, England
[3] Marine Biol Assoc UK, Plymouth, Devon, England
关键词
biodiversity conservation; closed system; ecosystem engineer; ecosystem functioning; habitat structure; keystone species; rehabilitation; restoration success; FRESH-WATER BIODIVERSITY; STREAM RESTORATION; SHALLOW LAKES; COASTAL INFRASTRUCTURE; POSITIVE INTERACTIONS; MICROBIAL PROPERTIES; RIVER RESTORATION; PLANT-COMMUNITIES; MARINE ECOSYSTEM; ECOLOGICAL VALUE;
D O I
10.1002/aqc.2702
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
1. Aquatic ecosystems are degraded by a variety of pressures as a result of the growing human population. Global-scale impacts include homogenization of biological communities, removal of top predators and ecosystem engineers, chemical pollution by excess nutrients and contaminants as well as deteriorating structural diversity, connectivity and process dynamics. There is a pressing societal need to reverse the decline in biodiversity and replace lost ecosystem functioning and services in aquatic ecosystems by enabling natural recovery or by active restoration. 2. Common concepts and approaches for conservation, recovery and restoration in freshwater and marine ecosystems, aided by recent advances in ecological theory, include decision criteria on priorities for conservation, harnessing natural recovery by cessation of impacts, restoring connectivity and meso-habitat diversity as well as the geomorphological structural template including hydrodynamic processes. Re-oligotrophication at catchment or regional sea-scale benefits from integrating freshwater and marine restoration. Species or assemblages that convey biogenic structure or act as ecosystem engineers and keystone species should be given priority. Top-down control can be reinstated in closed systems. 3. Differences between freshwater and marine ecosystems include the greater spatial restriction of many species in fresh water, the importance of rooted vegetation and insects in freshwater, and the much greater dispersal and connectivity in marine systems. These differences dictate different approaches, with more scope for active restoration work in fresh water and harnessing natural recovery in marine systems. 4. Restoration schemes need clearly defined target states. They should generally take a process-oriented and stepwise adaptive management approach judging success against reference or control sites. Societal and political expectations need to be managed and restoration schemes should not promise too much. Even minor rehabilitation of degraded ecosystems can put back some biodiversity and key services. Sometimes 'Ersatz'-ecosystems are better than nothing and the best that can be achieved, especially in urban settings. Copyright (C) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:942 / 962
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Cardiovascular genomics: recent progress, current challenges, future promise
    O'Donnell, Christopher J.
    GENOME BIOLOGY, 2000, 1 (01):
  • [42] Biological Phosphorus Recovery: Review of Current Progress and Future Needs
    Yang, Yu
    Shi, Xu
    Ballent, Wendy
    Mayer, Brooke K.
    WATER ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH, 2017, 89 (12) : 2122 - 2135
  • [43] (Eco)toxicological tests for assessing impacts of chemical stress to aquatic ecosystems: Facts, challenges, and future
    Schuijt, Lara M.
    Peng, Feng-Jiao
    van den Berg, Sanne J. P.
    Dingemans, Milou M. L.
    van den Brink, Paul J.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2021, 795
  • [44] Restoration of function: Current challenges and future opportunities through electrical stimulation
    Peckham, H
    JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, 2001, 38 (01): : XIII - XVI
  • [45] Progress and challenges of multi-habitat marine restoration in the eastern Aegean Sea, Türkiye
    Zafer Kızılkaya
    Ezgi Saydam
    Katy Walker
    Tolunay Tabak
    Bülent Miran
    Inci Tüney
    M. Tunca Olguner
    Funda Kok
    Vahit Alan
    Bengi Atay
    Serena Pennetti
    Zafer Tosunoğlu
    Berry Mulligan
    Harun Güçlüsoy
    npj Ocean Sustainability, 4 (1):
  • [46] A critical review of the ecotoxic effects of microplastics on aquatic, soil and atmospheric ecosystems and current research challenges
    Yang, Haitao
    Niu, Shuyan
    Guo, Menghao
    Xue, Yuying
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2025, 274
  • [47] Challenges for Restoration of Coastal Marine Ecosystems in the Anthropocene
    Abelson, Avigdor
    Reed, Daniel C.
    Edgar, Graham J.
    Smith, Carter S.
    Kendrick, Gary A.
    Orth, Robert J.
    Airoldi, Laura
    Silliman, Brian
    Beck, Michael W.
    Krause, Gesche
    Shashar, Nadav
    Stambler, Noga
    Nelson, Peter
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2020, 7
  • [48] The biological control of aquatic weeds in South Africa: Current status and future challenges
    Hill, Martin P.
    Coetzee, Julie
    BOTHALIA, 2017, 47 (02)
  • [49] Mitigation of urbanization effects on aquatic ecosystems by synchronous ecological restoration
    Fu, Hong
    Gauzere, Pierre
    Molinos, Jorge Garcia
    Zhang, Peiyu
    Zhang, Huan
    Zhang, Min
    Niu, Yuan
    Yu, Hui
    Brown, Lee E.
    Xu, Jun
    WATER RESEARCH, 2021, 204
  • [50] Drug safety testing paradigm, current progress and future challenges: an overview
    Ahuja, Varun
    Sharma, Sharad
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, 2014, 34 (06) : 576 - 594