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Mapping global threats to seagrass meadows reveals opportunities for conservation

Benjamin L H Jones Orcid Logo, Lucy Coals Orcid Logo, Leanne C Cullen-Unsworth Orcid Logo, Richard J Lilley Orcid Logo, Alex Bartlett Orcid Logo, Richard Unsworth Orcid Logo

Environmental Research: Ecology, Volume: 4, Issue: 2, Start page: 025005

Swansea University Author: Richard Unsworth Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Numerous global maps chart humanities impact on multiple levels of biodiversity, revealing a multitude of pressures across a variety of ecological systems. While useful for identifying the global scale policy changes needed to conserve the world’s biodiversity, they often lack resolution at the scal...

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Published in: Environmental Research: Ecology
ISSN: 2752-664X
Published: IOP Publishing 2025
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa69332
Abstract: Numerous global maps chart humanities impact on multiple levels of biodiversity, revealing a multitude of pressures across a variety of ecological systems. While useful for identifying the global scale policy changes needed to conserve the world’s biodiversity, they often lack resolution at the scale needed for local management and conservation. While we can broadly speculate the key large-scale drivers that have influenced seagrass populations over the last century, no global map exists that reveals the range and scale of human pressures on seagrass meadows. Using a citizen science database (https://seagrassspotter.org) that comprises of more than 8000 georeferenced points, we use a subset of these map the prevalence of multiple, locally observed anthropogenic threats to seagrass meadows. We find that 50% of human-impacted sites were within areas with designated protection, reflecting 4.4% of the world’s marine protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures where anthropogenic activities place seagrass at risk. Using vulnerability scores for each human impact, we identify high-risk sites in Columbia, Fiji, Indonesia, Mexico, Mozambique, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania, where multiple pressures likely place seagrass meadows on a trajectory of decline. In doing so, we build on a growing body of research highlighting the vulnerability of coastal ecosystems to human impacts, and at the same time, highlight the role of citizen science in identifying and mapping these threats at the resolution needed for management.
Keywords: citizen science, local knowledge, human pressures, risk, seagrass ecosystems, vulnerability
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: Synchronicity Earth, The Waterloo Foundation, GRID-Arendal, International Climate Initiative (IKI)
Issue: 2
Start Page: 025005