4.5 Article

Salt Marsh Restoration for the Provision of Multiple Ecosystem Services

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d13120680

Keywords

socio-ecological system; salt pan; estuary; habitat loss; degradation; ecosystem health

Funding

  1. South African Research Chairs Initiative through the South African National Department of Science and Innovation/National Research Foundation by a Community of Practice grant in Ocean Accounts Framework [125455]
  2. Water Research Commission [C2020/2021-00076]
  3. DSI/NRF Research Chair in Shallow Water Ecosystems [84375]
  4. DSI/NRF [111963]
  5. CSIR through its DSI parliamentary grant

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The restoration of salt marsh is crucial for natural coastal protection and climate change mitigation. A socio-ecological systems framework has been proposed to guide meaningful management interventions, with specific measures such as routing stormwater run-off to abandoned salt works to recreate aquatic habitats and provide nutrient filtration. This approach can be generalized and applied at a national scale to prioritize the restoration of degraded salt marsh areas.
Restoration of salt marsh is urgent, as these ecosystems provide natural coastal protection from sea-level rise impacts, contribute towards climate change mitigation, and provide multiple ecosystem services including supporting livelihoods. This study identified potential restoration sites for intervention where agricultural and degraded land could be returned to salt marsh at a national scale in South African estuaries. Overall, successful restoration of salt marsh in some estuaries will require addressing additional pressures such as freshwater inflow reduction and deterioration of water quality. Here, we present, a socio-ecological systems framework for salt marsh restoration that links salt marsh state and the well-being of people to guide meaningful and implementable management and restoration interventions. The framework is applied to a case study at the Swartkops Estuary where the primary restoration intervention intends to route stormwater run-off to abandoned salt works to re-create aquatic habitat for waterbirds, enhance carbon storage, and provide nutrient filtration. As the framework is generalized, while still allowing for site-specific pressures to be captured, there is potential for it to be applied at the national scale, with the largest degraded salt marsh areas set as priorities for such an initiative. It is estimated that similar to 1970 ha of salt marsh can be restored in this way, and this represents a 14% increase in the habitat cover for the country. Innovative approaches to restoring and improving condition are necessary for conserving salt marshes and the benefits they provide to society.

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