4.4 Article

Ecosystem services returned through seagrass restoration

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 583-588

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.12360

Keywords

carbon sequestration; denitrification; ecosystem functions; eelgrass; Zostera marina

Categories

Funding

  1. Virginia Coast Reserve LTER project [NSF DEB 0621014]
  2. Jones Environmental Research Endowment
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1237733] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Ecosystem restoration is often costly, but can be effective at increasing biodiversity and ecosystem services. We used a case studyreseeding seagrass to a coastal lagoonto demonstrate the value of enhanced ecosystem services as a result of restoration. We modeled the recovery of areal plant coverage in a system where seagrasses were lost due to disease and disturbance, and estimated the value of the returned functions of nitrogen removal and carbon sequestration. We estimated, as of 2010, that this restoration removes 170 ton of nitrogen per year via denitrificiation and sequesters carbon at a rate of 630 tons carbon per year in the sediment. Further, we estimated that natural recovery would take more than 100 years to reach the areal coverage achieved by restoration using seeds in just 10 years. Restoration enhanced this recovery, and the earlier establishment of plants results in a net gain of at least 4,100 ton of nitrogen removed from the system via denitrification and 15,000 ton of carbon sequestered in the sediment. These services have significant ecological and societal value.

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