Mangrove wetland restoration in China
The large-scale conversion of natural mangroves to aquaculture reduces species richness and diversity. Large areas of abandoned aquaculture ponds in areas where mangroves formerly predominated in China and Southeast Asia represent important potential effective targets for mangrove restoration. Here,...
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Zusammenfassung: | The large-scale conversion of natural mangroves to aquaculture reduces
species richness and diversity. Large areas of abandoned aquaculture ponds
in areas where mangroves formerly predominated in China and Southeast Asia
represent important potential effective targets for mangrove restoration.
Here, we empirically assessed the α-diversity (species richness) and
β-diversity (variation in community composition) of mangrove,
macrobenthos, fish, and waterbird in a tropical mangrove bay on Hainan
Island, China. We compared sites subjected to different pond-to-mangrove
restoration programs more than 20 years ago (passive restoration without
planting, and active restoration with planting) to nearby reference site
with natural mangrove forests and mudflats. To better understand how
β-diversity responds to restoration, we also distinguished between
β-diversity turnover and nestedness (richness difference). In general,
α-diversity values for both fish and waterbird communities, and
β-diversity values for the mangrove, macrobenthos, and waterbird
communities were lower at the restoration sites than at the reference
site, suggesting that the strong homogenizing effects of anthropogenic
habitat alternation was still apparent after more than 20 years since
aquaculture ceased. In addition, spatial turnover, not nestedness,
dominated total β-diversity both across the whole study area and at
individual sites, suggesting that multiple processes, such as
environmental filtering, helped to shape multi-taxa community structures.
Moreover, we found no evidence that planting in the abandoned ponds, in
addition to standard hydrological restoration, supported greater species
diversity of taxa like macrobenthos and waterbird than the naturally
regenerated site after more than 20 years’ recovery. Our results underline
the importance of avoiding the conversion of natural mangrove stands to
aquaculture wherever possible, and the urgent need to design effective
mangrove restoration techniques in tropical Asia. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.8sf7m0cmw |