Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication

Three decades following the onset of efforts to revert widespread eutrophication of coastal ecosystems, evidence of improvement of ecosystem status is growing. However, cumulative pressures have developed in parallel to eutrophication, including those associated with climate change, such as warming,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carlos M. Duarte, Dorte Krause-Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00470/full
id doaj-077dc40f89284533a7c55f846b1da53c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-077dc40f89284533a7c55f846b1da53c2020-11-25T01:31:50ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452018-12-01510.3389/fmars.2018.00470419185Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal EutrophicationCarlos M. Duarte0Carlos M. Duarte1Dorte Krause-Jensen2Dorte Krause-Jensen3Red Sea Research Center (RSRC), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, Saudi ArabiaArctic Research Centre, Aarhus, DenmarkDepartment of Bioscience, Aarhus University, Aarhus, DenmarkArctic Research Centre, Aarhus, DenmarkThree decades following the onset of efforts to revert widespread eutrophication of coastal ecosystems, evidence of improvement of ecosystem status is growing. However, cumulative pressures have developed in parallel to eutrophication, including those associated with climate change, such as warming, deoxygenation, ocean acidification and increased runoff. These additional pressures risk countering efforts to mitigate eutrophication and arrest coastal ecosystems in a state of eutrophication despite the efforts and significant resources already invested to revert coastal eutrophication. Here we argue that the time has arrived for a broader, more comprehensive approach to intervening to control eutrophication. Options for interventions include multiple levers controlling major pathways of nutrient budgets of coastal ecosystems, i.e., nutrient inputs, which is the intervention most commonly deployed, nutrient export, sequestration in sediments, and emissions of nitrogen to the atmosphere as N2 gas (denitrification). The levers involve local-scale hydrological engineering to increase flushing and nutrient export from (semi)enclosed coastal systems, ecological engineering such as sustainable aquaculture of seaweeds and mussels to enhance nutrient export and restoration of benthic habitats to increase sequestration in sediments as well as denitrification, and geo-engineering approaches including, with much precaution, aluminum injections in sediments. These proposed supplementary management levers to reduce eutrophication involve ecosystem-scale intervention and should be complemented with policy actions to protect benthic ecosystem components.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00470/fullcoastaleutrophicationrecoveryinterventionmanagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carlos M. Duarte
Carlos M. Duarte
Dorte Krause-Jensen
Dorte Krause-Jensen
spellingShingle Carlos M. Duarte
Carlos M. Duarte
Dorte Krause-Jensen
Dorte Krause-Jensen
Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
Frontiers in Marine Science
coastal
eutrophication
recovery
intervention
management
author_facet Carlos M. Duarte
Carlos M. Duarte
Dorte Krause-Jensen
Dorte Krause-Jensen
author_sort Carlos M. Duarte
title Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
title_short Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
title_full Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
title_fullStr Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
title_full_unstemmed Intervention Options to Accelerate Ecosystem Recovery From Coastal Eutrophication
title_sort intervention options to accelerate ecosystem recovery from coastal eutrophication
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Three decades following the onset of efforts to revert widespread eutrophication of coastal ecosystems, evidence of improvement of ecosystem status is growing. However, cumulative pressures have developed in parallel to eutrophication, including those associated with climate change, such as warming, deoxygenation, ocean acidification and increased runoff. These additional pressures risk countering efforts to mitigate eutrophication and arrest coastal ecosystems in a state of eutrophication despite the efforts and significant resources already invested to revert coastal eutrophication. Here we argue that the time has arrived for a broader, more comprehensive approach to intervening to control eutrophication. Options for interventions include multiple levers controlling major pathways of nutrient budgets of coastal ecosystems, i.e., nutrient inputs, which is the intervention most commonly deployed, nutrient export, sequestration in sediments, and emissions of nitrogen to the atmosphere as N2 gas (denitrification). The levers involve local-scale hydrological engineering to increase flushing and nutrient export from (semi)enclosed coastal systems, ecological engineering such as sustainable aquaculture of seaweeds and mussels to enhance nutrient export and restoration of benthic habitats to increase sequestration in sediments as well as denitrification, and geo-engineering approaches including, with much precaution, aluminum injections in sediments. These proposed supplementary management levers to reduce eutrophication involve ecosystem-scale intervention and should be complemented with policy actions to protect benthic ecosystem components.
topic coastal
eutrophication
recovery
intervention
management
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2018.00470/full
work_keys_str_mv AT carlosmduarte interventionoptionstoaccelerateecosystemrecoveryfromcoastaleutrophication
AT carlosmduarte interventionoptionstoaccelerateecosystemrecoveryfromcoastaleutrophication
AT dortekrausejensen interventionoptionstoaccelerateecosystemrecoveryfromcoastaleutrophication
AT dortekrausejensen interventionoptionstoaccelerateecosystemrecoveryfromcoastaleutrophication
_version_ 1725085013735636992