4.7 Article

Rise and fall of Caribbean mangroves

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 885, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163851

Keywords

Caribbean; Mangroves; Evolution; Paleoecology; Deforestation; Conservation

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Mangrove forests are essential ecosystems for biodiversity and carbon mitigation, but they are highly threatened. The CARMA database has analyzed past environmental shifts and the response of mangroves in the Caribbean region. The diversity and composition of Caribbean mangroves were shaped by evolutionary and climate changes, and human activities have led to significant deforestation. Urgent conservation actions are needed to prevent the disappearance of these ancient ecosystems.
Mangrove forests, which are essential for the maintenance of terrestrial and marine biodiversity on tropical coasts and constitute the main blue-carbon ecosystems for the mitigation of global warming, are among the world's most threatened ecosystems. Mangrove conservation can greatly benefit from paleoecological and evolutionary studies, as past analogs documenting the responses of these ecosystems to environmental drivers such as climate change, sea level shifts and anthropogenic pressure. A database (CARMA) encompassing nearly all studies on mangroves from the Caribbean region, one of the main mangrove biodiversity hotspots, and their response to past environmental shifts has recently been assembled and analyzed. The dataset contains over 140 sites and ranges from the Late Cretaceous to the present. The Caribbean was the cradle of Neotropical mangroves, where they emerged in the Middle Eocene (similar to 50 million years ago; Ma). A major evolutionary turnover occurred in the Eocene/Oligocene transition (34 Ma) that set the bases for the shaping of modern-like mangroves. However, the diversification of these communities leading to their extant composition did not occur until the Pliocene (similar to 5 Ma). The Pleistocene (the last 2.6 Ma) glacialinterglacial cycles caused spatial and compositional reorganization with no further evolution. Human pressure on Caribbean mangroves increased in the Middle Holocene (similar to 6000 years ago), when pre-Columbian societies began to clear these forests for cultivation. In recent decades, deforestation has significantly reduced Caribbean mangrove cover and it has been estimated that, if urgent and effective conservation actions are not undertaken, these 50 million-year-old ecosystems might disappear in a few centuries. A number of specific conservation and restoration applications based on the results of paleoecological and evolutionary studies are suggested.

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