4.7 Article

Courage under fire: Seagrass persistence adjacent to a highly urbanised city-state

Journal

MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN
Volume 83, Issue 2, Pages 417-424

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2014.01.012

Keywords

Coastal modification; Historical distribution; Long-term monitoring; Singapore

Funding

  1. National Parks Board
  2. Singapore-Delft Water Alliance's Marine & Coastal Research Programme (Theme 2): Dredging and infrastructure development near critical marine ecosystems [R-264-001-007-272]

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Due to increasing development Southeast Asia's coastlines are undergoing massive changes, but the associated impacts on marine habitats are poorly known. Singapore, a densely populated island city-state, is a quintessential example of coastal modification that has resulted in the (hitherto undocumented) loss of seagrass. We reconstructed the historic extent and diversity of local seagrass meadows through herbarium records and backwards extrapolation from contemporary seagrass locations. We also determined the current status of seagrass meadows using long-term monitoring data and identified the main threats to their presence in Singapore. Results show that, even though similar to 45% of seagrass has been lost during the last five decades, species diversity remains stable. The main cause of seagrass loss was, and continues to be, land reclamation. We conclude that strict controls on terrestrial runoff and pollution have made it possible for seagrass to persist adjacent to this highly urbanised city-state. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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