Abstract
Background and Objectives: Mangrove forests offer many essential ecosystem services, including the protection of (sub)tropical coastlines, their inhabitants, and the infrastructure from severe storms and tsunamis. However, mangroves themselves suffer severely from such phenomena. After such events, reforestation efforts are widely undertaken to facilitate the recovery of the mangroves. Many of these laborious activities, however, fail for a number of reasons. Material and Methods: In October 1998, the Honduran Island of Guanaja was severely hit by Hurricane Mitch, and, after the storm, almost all of the mangrove forests (97%) were rated as dead. Seven years after Mitch, a longterm survey on the regeneration of the mangroves started. Field samplings in six variably disturbed mangrove zones was conducted in 2005, 2009, and 2016. Along permanent line-transects, all living plant species were recorded for statistical analyses and for quantifying progress. In this paper, the focus is on the three most severely hit areas. In two of them, planting efforts were carried out while the third one was left to regenerate naturally. This setting allowed a direct comparison between natural and human-assisted regeneration processes under otherwise similar conditions and equally severe previous disturbance. Results: Reforestation measures were characterized by high mortality rates of Rhizophora mangle L. propagules planted predominantly. Some, however, surely survived and might have contributed to regeneration after the disturbance. In 2016, roughly two decades after Hurricane Mitch, low-growing Rhizophora mangle forests, with high ground cover, were found. Surprisingly, the area without any planting also witnessed similar mangrove rejuvenation in the same period. Conclusion: Findings on the recovering mangroves in Guanaja confirm the lessons learned from other mangrove rehabilitation measures: planting mostly fails and commonly does not accelerate the revegetation of disturbed forests. In naturally regenerating forests, recolonization may occur after a certain time-lag only if few diaspore sources survived in the surrounding; as soon as established mangrove plants bear propagules, a quick return to viable forests takes place, proving the high resilience of these coastal ecosystems.
Highlights
Mangroves offer many fundamental ecosystem services to humans [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
This paper focuses on the three most severely affected mangrove areas located on the windward side of the island and, exposed to the forces of Hurricane Mitch, which was one of the most powerful storms of the last century within the Caribbean [38]
This paper suggests that replanting should not be considered the primary means to restore mangrove forests after a severe disturbance
Summary
Mangroves offer many fundamental ecosystem services to humans [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Besides playing an important role in the earth’s carbon cycle, mangroves mitigate land degradation and erosion, act as a nursing ground for fish and invertebrates, and provide both timber and nontimber produce.Mangrove forests protect coastal human and nonhuman populations from tropical storms and tsunamis.Coastal protection is one of the most undervalued ecosystem services, despite having the highest net present value [10,11,12]. Planting of propagules (mainly Rhizophora species) or seedlings raised in nurseries is a common approach, combined, sometimes (and, if so, generally more successful), with hydrologic manipulation to restore proper physiochemical conditions for mangrove establishment and regrowth. Many of these laborious activities, fail for a number of reasons (e.g., planting in unsuitable topographic location, insufficient postplanting care, modified site conditions, predation by crabs and beetles [28,29,30,31,32]). Mangroves themselves suffer severely from such phenomena After such events, reforestation efforts are widely undertaken to facilitate the recovery of the mangroves.
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have