Guidelines for the conservation and restoration of seagrasses in the United States and adjacent waters


Autoria(s): Fonseca, Mark S.; Kenworthy, W. Judson; Thayer, Gordon W.
Data(s)

1998

Resumo

Seagrass ecosystems are protected under the federal "no-net-loss" policy for wetlands and form one of the most productive plant communities on the planet, performing important ecological functions. Seagrass beds have been recognized as a valuable resource critical to the health and function of coastal waters. Greater awareness and public education, however, is essential for conservation of this resource. Tremendous losses of this habitat have occurred as a result of development within the coastal zone. Disturbances usually kill seagrasses rapidly, and recovery is often comparatively slow. Mitigation to compensate for destruction of existing habitat usually follows when the agent of loss and responsible party are known. Compensation assumes that ecosystems can be made to order and, in essence, trades existing functional habitat for the promise of replacement habitat. While ~lant ingse agrass is not technically complex, there is no easy way to meet the goal of maintaining or increasing seagrass acreage. Rather, the entire process of planning, planting and monitoring requires attention to detail and does not lend itself to oversimplification.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/14649/1/das12.pdf

Fonseca, Mark S. and Kenworthy, W. Judson and Thayer, Gordon W. (1998) Guidelines for the conservation and restoration of seagrasses in the United States and adjacent waters. Silver Spring, MD, NOAA/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, 222pp. (NOAA Coastal Ocean Program Decision Analysis Series, 12)

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

NOAA/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/14649/

http://www.cop.noaa.gov/pubs/das/das12.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Biology #Ecology #Fisheries
Tipo

Monograph or Serial Issue

NonPeerReviewed