5 research outputs found
State of the knowledge on European marine habitat mapping and degraded habitats
During the last decades, several EU Directives and other international legislations have generated a large number of national initiatives (e.g. marine atlases) and EU programmes on habitat mapping. Nevertheless, the outcomes of these initiatives are fragmented and, to our best knowledge, to date there is no systematic assessment regarding the nature, quality and availability of information across the European seas. One of the main goals of the MERCES project (www.merces-project.eu) is to produce a census of available maps of European key marine habitats, along with their degradation status and restoration potential in the European Seas, providing a potential basis for future discussion on restoration activities.
MERCES is producing a census of European marine key habitat maps, degraded habitat maps and investigating key habitat restoration potential. To do this MERCES has
i. reviewed known existing habitat maps of European regional seas and provided source citations for all of the information
ii. reviewed degraded habitat map resources by regional sea and habitat type (e.g. seagrass, macroalgae, coral gardens, sponge aggregations, seamounts, vents), associated habitat deterioration (e.g. extent of decline), the most common human activities and pressures reported, and the recovery and restoration potential of these habitats
iii. reviewed 6 key habitats (including kelp and macroalgal forests, seagrass meadows, coralligenous assemblages, coral gardens and deep-sea bottom communities) and linked 6 major habitat features, such as dynamics, connectivity, structural complexity and vulnerability, to consequences for restoration and the likelihood of restoration succes
Current marine pressures and mechanisms driving changes in marine habitats
Human activities and the resultant pressures they place on the marine environment have been widely demonstrated to contribute to habitat degradation, therefore, their identification and quantification is an essential step towards any meaningful restoration effort. The overall scope of MERCES Deliverable 1.2 is to review current knowledge regarding the major marine pressures placed upon marine ecosystems in EU waters and the mechanisms by which they impact habitats in order to determine potential restoration pathways. An understanding of their geographical distribution is critical for any local assessment of degradation, as well as for planning conservation and restoration actions. This information would ideally be in the form of maps, which: (a) compile single or multiple activities and pressures over broad scales, integrating and visualizing available data and allowing direct identification of aggregations as well as gaps and (b) may be overlaid with habitat maps (or any other map layer containing additional information), thus combining different data levels and producing new information to be used for example when implementing EU policies. The deliverable also documents typical example habitat case studies, the prominent impacts and consequences of activities and pressures towards the identification of possible restoration or mitigation actions. Finally the deliverable discusses pressures, assessments, marine spatial planning and blue growth potential.
Activities and pressures are used in a strict sense, where marine activities are undertaken to satisfy the needs of societal drivers (e.g. aquaculture or tourism) and pressures are considered to be the mechanism through which an activity has an actual or potential effect on any part of the ecosystem (e.g. for demersal trawling activity, one pressure would be abrasion of the seabed). Habitats are addressed using a nested approach from large-scale geological features (e.g. shallow soft bottoms) to species-characterised habitats (e.g. Posidonia meadows) because of the way they are referred to in current policy documents which lack standard and precise definitions
Human activities and resultant pressures on key European marine habitats: An analysis of mapped resources
Human activities exert a wide range of pressures on marine ecosystems, often resulting in the loss of species and degradation of habitats. If effective policies and management practices to restore past damage and reduce future impacts to the marine environment are to be developed, knowledge of the extent, duration and severity of activities and pressures is essential, yet often lacking. As part of the EU H2020 project âMarine Ecosystem Restoration in Changing European Seasâ, this study uses an exhaustive review of published records, web resources, and grey literature to comprehensively assess the degree to which human activities and pressures are mapped within European seas. The results highlight a number of limitations and gaps, including: (a) limited geographic coverage at both the regional and sub-regional level; (b) insufficient spatial resolution and accuracy in recorded data for the planning of conservation and restoration actions; (c) a lack of access to the background data and metadata upon which maps are based, thus limiting the potential for synthesis of multiple data sources. Based on the findings, several recommendations for future marine research initiatives arise, most importantly the need for coordinated, geographically extended baseline assessments of the distribution and intensity of human activities and pressures, complying with high-level standardization regarding methodological approaches and the treatment of produced data
Habitat mapping in the European Seas - is it fit for purpose in the marine restoration agenda?
Este artĂculo contiene 10 pĂĄginas, 10 figuras.As habitat mapping is crucially important for developing effective management and restoration plans, the aim of this
work was to produce a census of available map resources at the European scale focusing on: a) key marine habitats; b)
degraded habitats; c) human activities and pressures acting on degraded habitats, and d) the restoration potential of
degraded habitats. Almost half of the 580 map records were derived from grey literature and web resources but
contained no georeferenced files for download, thus limiting further use of the data. Biogeographical heterogeneity was
observed and varied between the type and quality of information provided. This variability was mainly related to
differences in research efforts and stakeholder focus. Habitat degradation was assessed in only 28% of the map records
and was mostly carried out in a qualitative manner. Less than half of the map records included assessments on the
recovery/restoration potential of the degraded habitats, with passive restoration by removal of human activities being
the most commonly recommended measure. The current work has identified several gaps and challenges both in the
thematic and geographic coverage of the available map resources, as well as in the approaches implemented for the
harmonized assessment of habitat degradation. These should guide future mapping initiatives in order to more comprehensively
support and advise the marine habitat restoration agenda for better meeting the objectives set in relevant
policy documents and legislative acts in Europe.This research has received funding from the European Unionâs
Horizon 2020, research and innovation programme under grant
agreement No 689518 (MERCES: Marine Ecosystem Restoration in
Changing European Seas). TM was supported by Program Investigador
FCT, Portugal (IF/01194/2013).Peer reviewe