Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/44023
Título: Anthropogenic, Direct Pressures on Coastal Wetlands
Autor: Newton, Alice
Icely, John
Cristina, Sonia
Perillo, Gerardo M. E.
Turner, R. Eugene
Ashan, Dewan
Cragg, Simon
Luo, Yongming
Tu, Chen
Li, Yuan
Zhang, Haibo
Ramesh, Ramachandran
Forbes, Donald L.
Solidoro, Cosimo
Béjaoui, Béchir
Gao, Shu
Pastres, Roberto
Kelsey, Heath
Taillie, Dylan
Nhan, Nguyen
Brito, Ana C.
F. De Lima, Ricardo
Kuenzer, Claudia
Palavras-chave: coastal wetland
salt marsh
mangrove
seagrass
pressure, state and impact on human welfare
sustainability
climate change
Data: 7-Jul-2020
Resumo: Coastal wetlands, such as saltmarshes and mangroves that fringe transitional waters, deliver important ecosystem services that support human development. Coastal wetlands are complex social-ecological systems that occur at all latitudes, from polar regions to the tropics. This overview covers wetlands in five continents. The wetlands are of varying size, catchment size, human population and stages of economic development. Economic sectors and activities in and around the coastal wetlands and their catchments exert multiple, direct pressures. These pressures affect the state of the wetland environment, ecology and valuable ecosystem services. All the coastal wetlands were found to be affected in some ways, irrespective of the conservation status. The main economic sectors were agriculture, animal rearing including aquaculture, fisheries, tourism, urbanization, shipping, industrial development and mining. Specific human activities include land reclamation, damming, draining and water extraction, construction of ponds for aquaculture and salt extraction, construction of ports and marinas, dredging, discharge of effluents from urban and industrial areas and logging, in the case of mangroves, subsistence hunting and oil and gas extraction. The main pressures were loss of wetland habitat, changes in connectivity affecting hydrology and sedimentology, as well as contamination and pollution. These pressures lead to changes in environmental state, such as erosion, subsidence and hypoxia that threaten the sustainability of the wetlands. There are also changes in the state of the ecology, such as loss of saltmarsh plants and seagrasses, and mangrove trees, in tropical wetlands. Changes in the structure and function of the wetland ecosystems affect ecosystem services that are often underestimated. The loss of ecosystem services impacts human welfare as well as the regulation of climate change by coastal wetlands. These cumulative impacts and multi-stressors are further aggravated by indirect pressures, such as sea-level rise.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/44023
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2020.00144
Aparece nas colecções:cE3c - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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