Coastal engineering infrastructure impacts Blue Carbon habitats distribution and ecosystem functions

被引:5
|
作者
Mazarrasa, Ines [1 ,2 ]
Garcia-Orellana, Jordi [3 ,4 ]
Puente, Araceli [1 ]
Juanes, Jose A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cantabria, IHCantabria Inst Hidraul Ambiental, Parque Cient & Tecnol Cantabria PCTCAN, Santander, Spain
[2] CSIC, Ctr Estudios Avanzados Blanes, Blanes, Girona, Spain
[3] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Dept Fis, Barcelona, Spain
[4] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals, Barcelona, Spain
关键词
TIDAL MARSH SEDIMENTATION; SEA-LEVEL; SALT-MARSHES; SEASONAL VARIABILITY; BAY; DEFENSE; ESTUARY; SANTANDER; SURVIVAL; MEADOW;
D O I
10.1038/s41598-022-23216-7
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Intertidal estuarine habitats (e.g., saltmarshes and tidal flats) provide important ecosystem services to society, including coastal protection, food provision and C-org sequestration.Yet, estuaries and estuarine habitats have been subjected to intense human pressure, such as land-use change and artificialization of the shoreline to support economic activities and uses. Construction of engineering infrastructures (e.g., piers, bridges) in these areas alters estuary-wide hydromorphological conditions and thus sedimentation patterns at the estuarine scale, which are key drivers of habitats distribution and ecosystem structure, processes and functions. Most of the research on the impact of civil engineering structures on coastal habitats has focused on the biological communities that colonize them or the bottoms where they are placed, whereas their indirect impacts on adjacent habitats has been largely unexplored. Understanding the influence of man-made infrastructures on the distribution of estuarine habitats and functions is critical, particularly considering that shoreline armoring is expected to increase as a way to protect coastal areas from hazards derived from climate change. Shifts in habitat distribution and functions occur in several years or decades and relating them with the occurrence of past historical events is challenging when no monitoring data is available. By examining historical aerial photographs and different biogeochemical properties along a saltmarsh soil record, this study demonstrates that the construction of an infrastructure (i.e. bridge) caused a rapid transformation (similar to 30 years) of a bare sandflat into a high marsh community and to significant changes in sediment biogeochemical properties, including the decrease in sediment accretion rate and C-org burial rates since then. This study contributes to increase the knowledge on the impact that the construction in coastal areas of civil engineering infrastructures can cause in intertidal habitats distribution and the ecological functions they provide for climate change adaption and mitigation.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Coastal engineering infrastructure impacts Blue Carbon habitats distribution and ecosystem functions
    Inés Mazarrasa
    Jordi Garcia-Orellana
    Araceli Puente
    José A. Juanes
    Scientific Reports, 12
  • [2] Spatial distribution of flow currents and habitats in artificial buffer zones for ecosystem-based coastal engineering
    Xu, Yan
    Cai, Yanpeng
    Peng, Jianfeng
    Qu, Jiuhui
    Yang, Zhifeng
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2019, 20
  • [3] Special issue on coastal blue carbon and green infrastructure
    Kuwae, Tomohiro
    Crooks, Stephen
    COASTAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL, 2021, 63 (03) : 187 - 187
  • [4] Community impacts of a tussock sedge: Is ecosystem engineering important in benign habitats?
    Crain, CM
    Bertness, ND
    ECOLOGY, 2005, 86 (10) : 2695 - 2704
  • [5] Consumer impacts on ecosystem functions in coastal wetlands: The data gap
    Moore, Alexandria
    Fauset, Emma
    Asher, Frederick
    ECOSPHERE, 2020, 11 (02):
  • [6] Antarctic krill sequester similar amounts of carbon to key coastal blue carbon habitats
    Cavan, E. L.
    Mackay, N.
    Hill, S. L.
    Atkinson, A.
    Belcher, A.
    Visser, A.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 15 (01)
  • [7] The spatial distribution of blue carbon in the coastal wetlands of China
    Meng, Weiqing
    Feagin, Rusty A.
    Hu, Beibei
    He, Mengxuan
    Li, Hongyuan
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2019, 222 : 13 - 20
  • [8] Beyond carbon: Conceptualizing payments for ecosystem services in blue forests on carbon and other marine and coastal ecosystem services
    Lau, Winnie W. Y.
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2013, 83 : 5 - 14
  • [9] Conserving intertidal habitats: What is the potential of ecological engineering to mitigate impacts of coastal structures?
    Perkins, Matthew J.
    Ng, Terence P. T.
    Dudgeon, David
    Bonebrake, Timothy C.
    Leung, Kenneth M. Y.
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2015, 167 : 504 - 515
  • [10] Microplastics distribution in different habitats of Ximen Island and the trapping effect of blue carbon habitats on microplastics
    Li, Yaxin
    Huang, Runqiu
    Hu, Lingling
    Zhang, Chunfang
    Xu, Xiangrong
    Song, Li
    Wang, Zhiyin
    Pan, Xiangliang
    Christakos, George
    Wu, Jiaping
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2022, 181