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DOI10.3389/fmars.2019.00071
Lost Floodplain Wetland Environments and Efforts to Restore Connectivity, Habitat, and Water Quality Settings on the Great Barrier Reef
Waltham, Nathan J.1,2; Burrows, Damien1; Wegscheidl, Carla3; Buelow, Christina1,2; Ronan, Mike4; Connolly, Niall3; Groves, Paul5; Marie-Audas, Donna5; Creighton, Colin1; Sheaves, Marcus1,2
发表日期2019
EISSN2296-7745
卷号6
英文摘要

Managers are moving toward implementing large-scale coastal ecosystem restoration projects, however, many fail to achieve desired outcomes. Among the key reasons for this is the lack of integration with a whole-of-catchment approach, the scale of the project (temporal, spatial), the requirement for on-going costs for maintenance, the lack of clear objectives, a focus on threats rather than services/values, funding cycles, engagement or change in stakeholders, and prioritization of project sites. Here we critically assess the outcomes of activities in three coastal wetland complexes positioned along the catchments of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) lagoon, Australia, that have been subjected to restoration investment over a number of decades. Each floodplain has been modified by intensive agricultural production, heavy industry and mining infrastructure, urban/peri urban expansion, aquaculture development and infrastructure expansion. Most development has occurred in low-lying coastal floodplains, resulting in major hydrological modifications to the landscape. This has left the floodplain wetlands in a degraded and hydrologically modified state, with poor water quality (hypoxic, eutrophication, sedimentation, and persistent turbidity), loss of habitat, and disconnected because of flow hydraulic barriers, excessive aquatic plant growth, or establishment of invasive species. Successful GBR wetland ecosystem restoration and management first requires an understanding of what constitutes "success" and must be underpinned by an understanding of complex cause and effect pathways, with a focus on management of services and values. This approach should recognize that these wetlands are still assets in a modified landscape. Suitable, long term, scientific knowledge is necessary to provide government and private companies with the confidence and comfort that their investment delivers dividend (environmental) returns.


WOS研究方向Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Marine & Freshwater Biology
来源期刊FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/93716
作者单位1.James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Ctr Trop Water & Aquat Ecosyst Res, Townsville, Qld, Australia;
2.James Cook Univ, Sci Integrated Coastal Ecosyst Management, Sch Marine Biol & Aquaculture, Coll Sci & Engn, Townsville, Qld, Australia;
3.Queensland Govt, Dept Agr & Fisheries, Rural Econ Dev, Townsville, Qld, Australia;
4.Queensland Govt, Dept Environm & Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia;
5.Australian Govt, Great Barrier Reef Marine Pk Author, Townsville, Qld, Australia
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Waltham, Nathan J.,Burrows, Damien,Wegscheidl, Carla,et al. Lost Floodplain Wetland Environments and Efforts to Restore Connectivity, Habitat, and Water Quality Settings on the Great Barrier Reef[J],2019,6.
APA Waltham, Nathan J..,Burrows, Damien.,Wegscheidl, Carla.,Buelow, Christina.,Ronan, Mike.,...&Sheaves, Marcus.(2019).Lost Floodplain Wetland Environments and Efforts to Restore Connectivity, Habitat, and Water Quality Settings on the Great Barrier Reef.FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE,6.
MLA Waltham, Nathan J.,et al."Lost Floodplain Wetland Environments and Efforts to Restore Connectivity, Habitat, and Water Quality Settings on the Great Barrier Reef".FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE 6(2019).
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