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Consequences of Coastal Wetlands Reclamation and the Need for Integrating Impact Assessment of Invasive Alien Plants Species and Coastal Armoring in Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s41742-022-00461-2

Keywords

Coastal reclamation; Invasive plants; Coastal armoring; Ecological impacts; Life cycle assessment; Pollution

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32071521, 31800429]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20170540]
  3. Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of Technology and Material of Water Treatment, China

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Efforts to restore and reclaim coastal wetlands have led to the evolution of invasive alien plant species and coastal defenses, intensifying synergistic stresses on coastal environments. Despite insufficient research on IAPS, there is a need to explore ecological impacts and develop more effective assessment tools.
Efforts to restore and reclaim coastal wetlands have led to the evolution of invasive alien plant species and coastal defenses across significant parts of the globe. Synergistic stresses on coastal environments are intensifying due to the implementation of invasive alien plant species (IAPS) and the rapid expansion of coastal protection. Combined with sea-level rise and other projected climate change impacts, coastal habitats are expected to face much greater pressures and habitat degradation. The lack of more extended timescale studies on IAPS and the insufficient knowledge about the ecological impacts of coastal armoring suggest that life cycle assessment (LCA) is still underutilized within the coastal environment. We examine quantitative methods for cause-effect evaluation of three major biodiversity loss drivers: biodiversity/habitat loss, greenhouse gases GHG warming and nutrient enrichment/eutrophication, which are pertinent to IAPS, and coastal armoring in wetlands. Though there has been a scarce application of LCA to measure anthropogenic impacts on coastal ecosystems, our analysis shows that impact indicators can be enhanced for all known drivers but at varying levels of cause-effect pathway coverage, ambiguity, and spatial coverage. Modeling methods for predicting the spatial distribution and severity of human-driven actions in the coastal environment are well developed. Such procedures could be deployed to create spatially explicit LCA fate factors. We emphasize unique research paradigms to make LCA a more thorough and rigorous environmental impact assessment tool by incorporating coastal biodiversity loss, especially IAPS and habitat loss, in a consistent manner. Stakeholder participation in coastal ecosystem management may help ameliorate budgetary concerns and enhance wetland restoration practices and implementations. [GRAPHICS] .

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