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Posidonia oceanica restoration, a relevant strategy after boat anchoring degradation?

Authors :
Interreg
Collectivité de Corse
Setec Fondation
Office français de la biodiversité (France)
Pergent, Christine
Acunto, S.
André, S.
Barralón, E.
Calvo, S.
Castejón-Silvo, Inés
Culioli, Jean-Michel
Lehmann, L.
Molenaar, H.
Monnier, B.
Oberti, P.
Pey, A.
Piazzi, Luigi
Santoni, M.C.
Terrados, Jorge
Tomasello, A.
Pergent, Gérard
Interreg
Collectivité de Corse
Setec Fondation
Office français de la biodiversité (France)
Pergent, Christine
Acunto, S.
André, S.
Barralón, E.
Calvo, S.
Castejón-Silvo, Inés
Culioli, Jean-Michel
Lehmann, L.
Molenaar, H.
Monnier, B.
Oberti, P.
Pey, A.
Piazzi, Luigi
Santoni, M.C.
Terrados, Jorge
Tomasello, A.
Pergent, Gérard
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The anchoring of large pleasure boats constitutes one of the main threats in shallow marine habitats and particularly for seagrass beds. In the Mediterranean, this activity has seen constant development during the last decades, causing major physical disturbances in Posidonia oceanica meadows and associated ecosystem services, notably in terms of climate change mitigation (i.e. carbon fixation and sequestration capacities). In this context, the aims of the present study are to estimate the impact of these anchoring activities on P. oceanica meadows in a particularly highlyfrequented area (Sant’Amanza gulf, SE Corsica Island) and to set up a strategy to restore this major carbon sink. Since the last decade, time-series of marine habitat maps revealed an important regression of P. oceanica meadows, with a loss of 72.9 ha, corresponding to 11% of the meadow surface and 9% decline in the total carbon fixation and sequestration performed each year. Moreover, in the most impacted part of the bay (Balistra bay), a loss of 16.6 ha (28%) has been recorded between 2011 and 2022. Following recent enforcement of anchoring regulation, prohibiting the anchoring of large units (greater than 24 m), and the lockdown linked to the COVID-19 pandemic, anchorages in the seagrass reduced by 92%, between 2018 and 2022. Natural recovery was observed at the edge of the meadow (plagiotropic rhizomes) but this growth is slow and the areas to recover are large. As a result, a transplant experiment, from cuttings harvested from the adjacent meadows, was initiated in the spring 2021. Four restoration techniques are being tested in the some pilot sites and the development of these transplants will be monitored and compared to the natural recovery.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1380451996
Document Type :
Electronic Resource