| Literature DB >> 31591428 |
Shanze Li1,2, Tian Xie3, Steven C Pennings4, Yuchun Wang5,6, Christopher Craft7, Mingming Hu1,2.
Abstract
We compared coastal restoration projects in a developing country, China, and a developed country, the United States of America, both of which are facing loss and degradation of coastal habitats at similar latitudes, for the period of 1992-2014. To document the scale of coastal habitat restoration projects in the two countries, we identified 914 coastal restoration projects with an accumulated area of 300,521 acres in China, with most of our information coming from scientific papers, and 1,620 coastal restoration projects with an accumulated area of 243,064 acres in the USA, with most of our information coming from public databases. In both countries, about half the projects were in wetland habitats, but China had a greater proportion of projects in submerged habitats (43% versus 28% in the USA) and the USA a greater proportion in coastal upland habitats (21% versus 9% in China). The number of new projects steadily increased over time in China, but dropped after 2006 in the USA, although the total cost of new projects continued to increase. The number of projects in China and the total cost of projects in the USA were correlated with national GDP. Restoration projects in China used fewer techniques, had fewer partners, and took longer to complete than projects in the USA. Information about projects was incomplete, especially in China, and both countries could do more to make information publically available. We know more about project construction than project outcomes, and it is unclear whether projects are achieving their goals or whether the techniques used are optimal.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31591428 PMCID: PMC6779881 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50930-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study areas in China and the USA. (A) Distribution of coastal submerged areas in China. (B) Distribution of coastal submerged areas in the USA. (C) Distribution of coastal wetlands in China. (D) Distribution of coastal wetlands in the USA. (E) Distribution of coastal upland areas in China. (F) Distribution of coastal upland areas in the USA. (Although each of the projects is represented by a single point, many involve activities that cover large areas at multiple project locations. Refer to the project descriptions and related information to better understand the full spatial extent of the project activities and their impacts. Some newly initiated projects may not yet appear on the map).
Figure 2Number of new coastal restoration projects started each year from 1992 to 2014 in (A) China and (B) the USA. Projects are grouped into three broad habitat types. Restoration effort as a function of habitat type over time in (C) China and (D) the USA. Data are the percent of acres of each habitat type restored per year.
Different restoration techniques applied to different types of restored habitat in USA and China. A more detailed version of this table is presented in the Appendix (Table S2).
| Habitat Categories Restored | Habitat Types Restored | Restored acres | Restoration Techniques (number of total techniques) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | Wetland | Tidal wetland | 35,718 | berm/dike removal, bird habitat enhancement, debris removal, fish farm removal, freshwater introduction, invasive removal, pest control, tidal channel excavation, topography reconstruction, vegetation planting, other (10). |
| Mangrove | 79,637 | |||
| Submerged | Seagrass | 26.96 | berm/dike removal, coral larvae supplement, coral transplant, debris removal, fish farm removal, marine ranching, reef construction, stock enhancement, vegetation planting, other (9). | |
| Coral reef | 116.38 | |||
| Coastal waters | 117,176 | |||
| Upland | Sandy beach | 67,846 | beach nourishment, debris removal, fish farm removal, other (3). | |
| USA | Wetland | Forested wetland | 6,363 | beach nourishment, berm/dike modification (including replacement), berm/dike removal, bird habitat enhancement, bulkhead removal, contaminant removal/remediation, culvert modification (including replacement), culvert removal, dam modification (including replacement), dam removal, debris removal, erosion control, fencing/netting, fill removal, fish exclusion devices, fish passage, invasives removal: fauna/ vegetation, land acquisition, large woody debris/structure placement, native plant nursery construction, nutrient management, placement of dredge material, planting, prescribed burn, reef construction: artificial materials, reef construction: natural materials, signage, species reintroduction (non-plant), stock enhancement, storm water/runoff controls, stream channel rehabilitation/creation, stream flow modification, stream pool construction, substrate modification, terracing, tide gate installation, tide gate modification (including replacement), tide gate removal, weir construction (39). |
| Tidal wetland | 5,683 | |||
| Freshwater marsh | 11,302 | |||
| Salt marsh | 112,196 | |||
| Mangrove | 5,040 | |||
| Shrub swamp (non-mangrove) | 2,027 | |||
| Others | 19,860 | |||
| Submerged | Submerged aquatic vegetation | 1,192 | bird habitat enhancement, contaminant removal/remediation, coral reattachment, coral reef construction, coral stabilization, coral transplant, culvert modification (including replacement), debris removal, erosion control, fill removal, fish hatchery construction, fish passage, fishway, invasives removal: fauna/ vegetation, large woody debris/structure placement, native plant nursery construction, nutrient management, oyster gardening, oyster reef/shell bottom, planting, reef construction: artificial materials, reef construction: natural materials, signage, species reintroduction (non-plant), stock enhancement, storm water/runoff controls, stream channel rehabilitation/creation, stream flow modification, submerged aquatic vegetation, substrate modification, tide gate modification (including replacement) (~30). | |
| Coral reef | 466 | |||
| Pond | 14,365 | |||
| Soft bottom/mud | 732 | |||
| Oyster reef/shell bottom | 1,103 | |||
| Kelp | 23 | |||
| Water column | 1,418 | |||
| Soft bottom/sand | 1,756 | |||
| Hard bottom | 62 | |||
| Others | 387 | |||
| Upland | Maritime forest | 224 | beach nourishment, berm/dike modification (including replacement), bird habitat enhancement, bulkhead removal, culvert modification (including replacement), culvert removal, debris removal, erosion control, fencing/netting, fill removal, fish exclusion devices, invasives removal: fauna/vegetation, land acquisition, native plant nursery construction, oyster gardening, planting, prescribed burn, reef construction: artificial materials, signage, species reintroduction (non-plant), substrate modification, other (~21). | |
| Dune | 2,317 | |||
| Beach | 864 | |||
| Rocky shoreline | 44 | |||
| Others | 55,642 |
Percent of coastal restoration projects in China and the USA for which each type of information was available.
| Types of information available | China (%) | USA (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Habitat Types Restored | 100 | 93 |
| Restoration Techniques | 97 | 86 |
| Implementation start date | 100 | 94 |
| Implementation completion date | 34 | 78 |
| Longitude, Latitude | 88 | 89 |
| Acres | 52 | 86 |
| Total project cost | 2 | 89 |
Figure 3Annual costs of all new coastal restoration projects from 1992 to 2014 in the USA.
Figure 4Relationships between the number of new coastal restoration projects started each year from 1992 to 2014 and the Gross domestic product (GDP) in (A) China (y = 9.58x + 9.05, r2 = 0.96, P < 0.001) and (B) the USA (y = 6.03x − 4.65, r2 = 0.04, P = 0.18), and (C) relationship between project costs and the GDP (y = 48.17 x −278.23, r2 = 0.23, P = 0.012) of the USA.