Abstract

Coastal wetlands mainly include ecosystems of mangroves, coral reefs, salt marsh, and sea grass beds. As the buffer zone between land and sea, they are frequently threatened from both sides. The world coastal wetland lost more than 50% of its area in the 20th century, largely before their great value, such as wave attenuation, erosion control, biodiversity support, and carbon sequestration, was fully recognized. World wetland loss and degradation was accelerated in the last three decades, caused by both anthropogenic and natural factors, such as land reclamation, aquaculture, urbanization, harbor and navigation channel construction, decreased sediment input from the catchments, sea level rise, and erosion. Aquaculture is one of the key destinations of coastal wetland transformation. Profound consequences have been caused by coastal wetland loss, such as habitat loss for wild species, CO2 and N2O emission from land reclamation and aquaculture, and flooding. Great efforts have been made to restore coastal wetlands, but challenges remain due to lack of knowledge about interactions between vegetation and morphological dynamics. Compromise among the different functionalities remains a challenge during restoration of coastal wetlands, especially when faced with highly profitable coastal land use. To solve the problem, multi-disciplinary efforts are needed from physio-chemical–biological monitoring to modelling, designing, and restoring practices with site-specific knowledge.

Highlights

  • The world’s wetlands have been diminishing since the 19th century

  • The purpose of this paper is to provide a comprehensive understanding of the importance of coastal wetlands, their current status of losses and consequences at different regions, and challenges faced for restoration

  • The world coastal wetlands are faced with great pressure of being “squeezed” by human land use and sea-level rise

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Summary

Introduction

The world’s wetlands have been diminishing since the 19th century. Many wetlands were reclaimed for other use (e.g., agriculture) before their significance was recognized. According to the Ramsar Convention (Ramsar Convention Secretariat 2010), coastal wetlands include mangroves, salt marshes, seagrass, coral reefs, beaches, estuaries, and coastal water bodies within −6 m depth. Mangroves and salt marshes are the most prominent. Mangroves are mainly distributed along tropical muddy coasts, with a total area of 150 000 km, while salt marshes dominate the muddy coasts from subtropical, temperate to sub-polar and arctic zones, with a total area of 45 000 km (Scott et al 2014, see http://www.ramsar.org). The area of mangroves and salt marshes used

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