4.8 Article

Drivers of global mangrove loss and gain in social-ecological systems

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-33962-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council - Nature Conservancy and Healthy Land and Water [LP170101171]
  2. Julius Career Award from CSIRO and acknowledges the Coasts and Ocean Programme 'Nature-Based Solutions and Restoration' research domain at CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere
  3. Australian Laureate fellowship [FL200100133]
  4. Australian Research Council [FL200100133, LP170101171] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Mangrove forests play a crucial role in protecting communities from storms and supporting fisheries. The study reveals a shift in the association between economic growth and mangrove forests, from negative impact to enabling expansion. Furthermore, community forestry is found to promote mangrove expansion, while conversion to agriculture and aquaculture results in high loss.
Mangrove forests protect communities from storms and support fisheries. Here, the authors show that the association with economic growth has shifted from negatively impacting mangroves to enabling mangrove expansion, and that community forestry is promoting mangrove expansion. Mangrove forests store high amounts of carbon, protect communities from storms, and support fisheries. Mangroves exist in complex social-ecological systems, hence identifying socioeconomic conditions associated with decreasing losses and increasing gains remains challenging albeit important. The impact of national governance and conservation policies on mangrove conservation at the landscape-scale has not been assessed to date, nor have the interactions with local economic pressures and biophysical drivers. Here, we assess the relationship between socioeconomic and biophysical variables and mangrove change across coastal geomorphic units worldwide from 1996 to 2016. Globally, we find that drivers of loss can also be drivers of gain, and that drivers have changed over 20 years. The association with economic growth appears to have reversed, shifting from negatively impacting mangroves in the first decade to enabling mangrove expansion in the second decade. Importantly, we find that community forestry is promoting mangrove expansion, whereas conversion to agriculture and aquaculture, often occurring in protected areas, results in high loss. Sustainable development, community forestry, and co-management of protected areas are promising strategies to reverse mangrove losses, increasing the capacity of mangroves to support human-livelihoods and combat climate change.

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