One hundred priority questions for advancing seagrass conservation in Europe

L. Nordlund, R. Unsworth, Sieglind Wallner‐Hahn, Lavenia Ratnarajah, P. Beca‐Carretero, Elmira Boikova, James C. Bull, Rosa M. Chefaoui, C. B. de los Santos, Karine Gagnon, J. Garmendia, F. Gizzi, L. L. Govers, Camilla Gustafsson, Elitsa Hineva, Eduardo Infantes, J. Canning‐Clode, Marlene Jahnke, P. Kleitou, Hilary Kennedy, Stefania Klayn, Tiia Moller, J. Monteiro, Nerea Piñeiro‐Juncal, E. Ponis, V. Papathanasiou, D. Poursanidis, Riccardo Pieraccini, O. Serrano, Ana. I. Sousa, Susanne Schäfer, Francesca Rossi, D. S. Storey, M. M. van Katwijk, Dave Wall, Emma A. Ward, R. Wilkes
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Abstract

Seagrass ecosystems are of fundamental importance to our planet and wellbeing. Seagrasses are marine flowering plants, which engineer ecosystems that provide a multitude of ecosystem services, for example, blue foods and carbon sequestration. Seagrass ecosystems have largely been degraded across much of their global range. There is now increasing interest in the conservation and restoration of these systems, particularly in the context of the climate emergency and the biodiversity crisis. The collation of 100 questions from experts across Europe could, if answered, improve our ability to conserve and restore these systems by facilitating a fundamental shift in the success of such work.Seagrass meadows provide numerous ecosystem services including biodiversity, coastal protection, and carbon sequestration. In Europe, seagrasses can be found in shallow sheltered waters along coastlines, in estuaries & lagoons, and around islands, but their distribution has declined. Factors such as poor water quality, coastal modification, mechanical damage, overfishing, land‐sea interactions, climate change and disease have reduced the coverage of Europe’s seagrasses necessitating their recovery. Research, monitoring and conservation efforts on seagrass ecosystems in Europe are mostly uncoordinated and biased towards certain species and regions, resulting in inadequate delivery of critical information for their management. Here, we aim to identify the 100 priority questions, that if addressed would strongly advance seagrass monitoring, research and conservation in Europe. Using a Delphi method, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers with seagrass experience from across Europe and with diverse seagrass expertise participated in the process that involved the formulation of research questions, a voting process and an online workshop to identify the final list of the 100 questions. The final list of questions covers areas across nine themes: Biodiversity & Ecology; Ecosystem services; Blue carbon; Fishery support; Drivers, Threats, Resilience & Response; Monitoring & Assessment; Conservation & Restoration; Governance, Policy & Management; and Communication. Answering these questions will fill current knowledge gaps and place European seagrass onto a positive trajectory of recovery.
推进欧洲海草保护的一百个优先问题
海草生态系统对我们的地球和福祉至关重要。海草是一种海洋有花植物,它设计的生态系统可提供多种生态系统服务,例如蓝色食物和碳封存。海草生态系统在全球大部分地区已经退化。现在,人们对保护和恢复这些系统的兴趣与日俱增,尤其是在气候紧急情况和生物多样性危机的背景下。海草草甸提供了众多生态系统服务,包括生物多样性、海岸保护和碳封存。在欧洲,海草分布在海岸线沿线、河口和泻湖以及岛屿周围的浅水避风水域,但其分布已经减少。水质差、海岸改造、机械损伤、过度捕捞、陆海相互作用、气候变化和疾病等因素减少了欧洲海草的覆盖范围,因此有必要对其进行恢复。欧洲对海草生态系统的研究、监测和保护工作大多缺乏协调,而且偏重于某些物种和地区,导致无法为海草管理提供足够的关键信息。在此,我们旨在确定 100 个优先问题,如果这些问题得到解决,将有力地推动欧洲的海草监测、研究和保护工作。采用德尔菲法,来自欧洲各地具有海草经验和不同海草专业知识的研究人员、从业人员和决策者参与了这一过程,其中包括制定研究问题、投票过程和在线研讨会,以确定 100 个问题的最终清单。最终问题清单涵盖九个主题领域:生物多样性与生态;生态系统服务;蓝碳;渔业支持;驱动因素、威胁、恢复力与应对;监测与评估;保护与恢复;治理、政策与管理;以及交流。对这些问题的回答将填补目前的知识空白,并使欧洲海草步入积极的恢复轨道。
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