Greening of grey infrastructure should not be used as a Trojan horse to facilitate coastal development
Climate change and coastal urbanization are driving the replacement of natural habitats with artificial structures and reclaimed land globally. These novel habitats are often poor surrogates for natural habitats. The application of integrated greening of grey infrastructure (IGGI) to artificial shor...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of applied ecology 2020-09, Vol.57 (9), p.1762-1768 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Climate change and coastal urbanization are driving the replacement of natural habitats with artificial structures and reclaimed land globally. These novel habitats are often poor surrogates for natural habitats.
The application of integrated greening of grey infrastructure (IGGI) to artificial shorelines demonstrates how multifunctional structures can provide biodiversity benefits whilst simultaneously serving their primary engineering function. IGGI is being embraced globally, despite many knowledge gaps and limitations. It is a management tool to compensate anthropogenic impacts as part of the Mitigation Hierarchy. There is considerable scope for misuse and ‘greenwashing’ however, by making new developments appear more acceptable, thus facilitating the regulatory process.
We encourage researchers to exercise caution when reporting on small‐scale experimental trials. We advocate that greater attention is paid to when experiments ‘fail’ or yield unintended outcomes. We advise revisiting, repeating and expanding on experiments to test responses over broader spatio‐temporal scales to improve the evidence base.
Synthesis and applications. Where societal and economic demand makes development inevitable, particular attention should be paid to avoiding, minimizing and rehabilitating environmental impacts. Integrated greening of grey infrastructure (IGGI) should be implemented as partial compensation for environmental damage. Mutual benefits for both humans and nature can be achieved when IGGI is implemented retrospectively in previously developed or degraded environments. We caution, however, that any promise of net biodiversity gain from new developments should be scrutinized and any local ecological benefits set in the context of the wider environmental impacts. A ‘greened’ development will always impinge on natural systems, a reality that is much less recognized in the sea than on land.
Resumen
Cambio climático y urbanización costera están causando el reemplazo de hábitats naturales con estructuras artificiales y aprovechamiento del territorio a nivel mundial. Estos nuevos hábitats a menudo son sustitutos pobres de los hábitats naturales.
La aplicación de ‘Integrated greening of grey infrastructure’ (IGGI) a costas artificiales, demuestra como estructuras multifuncionales pueden proporcionar beneficios a la biodiversidad mientras cumplen simultáneamente su función principal. IGGI está siendo adoptada a nivel mundial, a pesar de un gran deficit en nuestro con |
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ISSN: | 0021-8901 1365-2664 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1365-2664.13683 |