4.4 Article

Assessing mangrove restoration practices using species-interaction networks

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.13546

Keywords

camera traps; ecological networks; forest; marine; plant-animal interactions; Wallacea

Categories

Funding

  1. UK Natural and Environmental Research Council (NERC) [NE/S006990/1]
  2. Newton Fund Wallacea Projects [NE/S006990/1]
  3. DRPM Ministry of Research Technology and Higher Education, Indonesia through the Basic Research Scheme [201-01/UN7.P4.3/PP/2019, 257-15/UN7.P 4.3/PP/2019]
  4. NERC [NE/S006990/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study assessed the utility of using species-interaction networks for evaluating mangrove restoration outcomes for the first time, comparing the structure and complexity of mangrove ecological networks in restored and natural plots, and highlighting the usefulness of video recording data collection for constructing species-interaction networks.
Mangroves are uniquely important ecosystems, for preserving biodiversity, sustaining livelihoods, and mitigating against climate change. However, they are degraded globally and are therefore a priority for ecosystem restoration. To date, the assessment of mangrove restoration outcomes is generally poor, and the limited studies that do exist are focused largely on forest area. Thus, more holistic ways of assessing the outcomes of mangrove restoration projects on biodiversity and associated ecological processes are urgently needed. Ecological networks are a useful tool for simultaneously examining both. Here, we assessed the utility of using species-interaction networks for evaluating mangrove restoration outcomes for the first time. We compared the structure and complexity of mangrove ecological networks in replicated monoculture reforestation, mixed species regeneration and reference forest plots in two study areas in Sulawesi, Indonesia, an estuarine, and a coastal fringe mangrove system. We also combined and evaluated sampling methods, utilizing traditional plant-animal sampling while also integrating video recording data in a novel way. We found significant differences in the structure and complexity of mangrove networks between restored and natural plots, with contrasting effects between the two sites. Our results show differences in the complex ways in which taxa interact in mangrove restoration projects, which would be overlooked if common biodiversity metrics, such as species richness, were used alone, with consequences for the restoration of ecosystem functioning. We also highlight the utility of video recording data collection for constructing species-interaction networks, overcoming the detrimental impacts of observer presence for some key species.

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