Initiating and upscaling mussel reef establishment with life cycle informed restoration: Successes and future challenges
Temmink, Ralph J.M.; Fivash, Gregory S.; Govers, Laura L.; Nauta, Janne; Marin-Diaz, Beatriz; Cruijsen, Peter M.J.M.; Didderen, Karin; Penning, Emma; Olff, Han; Heusinkveld, Jannes H.T.; Lengkeek, Wouter; Christianen, Marjolijn J.A.; Reijers, Valérie C.; Bouma, Tjeerd J.; van der Heide, Tjisse
(2022) Ecological Engineering, volume 175, pp. 1 - 8
(Article)
Abstract
Worldwide, coastal ecosystems are rapidly degrading in quality and extent. While novel restoration designs include facilitation to enhance restoration success in stressful environments, they typically focus on a single life-stage, even though many organisms go through multiple life-stages accompanied by different bottlenecks. A new approach – life cycle informed restoration
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– was designed to ameliorate multiple bottlenecks throughout an organism's life cycle. It has successfully been tested on a small scale to facilitate intertidal bivalve reef formation in the Netherlands and Florida. Yet, it remains unknown whether this approach can be scaled to ecosystem-relevant scales. To test whether life cycle informed restoration is upscalable, we conducted a large-scale restoration experiment using blue mussel reefs as a model system. In our experiment, we used biodegradable structures to temporarily facilitate mussel reef formation by providing early-life settlement substrates, and subsequently, reduce post-settlement predation on an intertidal flat in the Wadden Sea, the Netherlands. The structures were placed in 10 × 20 m plots, mimicking bands found in natural mussel beds, spread out across 650 m, and were followed for two years. Our results show that the structures enhance mussel biomass (0.7 ± 0.2 kg DW m−2), as mussels were absent in bare plots. However, biomass varied within plots; in intact structures it was 60 times higher (1.2 ± 0.2 kg DW m−2) than in those that became buried (0.02 ± 0.009 kg DW m−2). Next to burial, 18–46% of the structures were lost due to technical failure, especially during winters at this exposed site. We show that the life cycle informed restoration principle works, but we encountered technical challenges due to larger scale processes (e.g. sedimentation). Furthermore, environmental information is essential for site selection, and for restoration, the functioning of such structures should be tested under extreme conditions before upscaling.
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Keywords: BESE, Blue mussel, Establishment, Facilitation, Mussel beds, Mytilus edulis, Substrate, Environmental Engineering, Nature and Landscape Conservation, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
ISSN: 0925-8574
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Funding Information: The authors would like to thank all volunteers and professionals who helped incorporating the coir rope in the structures and in setting up and monitoring the experiment. We like to thank Henk Wiersma from the Fieldwork Company for all his inventions (mussel corer, rebar pressing device) and Maarten Zwarts for being drone pilot. We thank Natuurmonumenten for site access and the vessel De Ambulant for hosting us. R.J.M.T., G.S.F., K.D., W.L., T.J.B., T.v.d.H were funded by NWO/TTW-OTP grant 14424 , in collaboration with private and public partners: Natuurmonumenten, STOWA, Rijkswaterstaat, Van Oord, Bureau Waardenburg, Enexio and Rodenburg Biopolymers. H.O., E.P and L.L.G were funded by a grant from Waddenfonds and Rijkswaterstaat, for the project ‘dynamic Griend’. T.v.d.H, L.L.G and V.R.R. were additionally funded by OBN. B.M.D. and T.J.B. were funded by NWO/TTW All Risk grant P15-21 B1 , in collaboration with private and public partners: the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management (RWS), Deltares, STOWA, the regional water authority Noorderzijlvest, the regional water authority Vechtstromen, it Fryske Gea, HKV consultants, Natuurmonumenten, Waterboard HHNK. T.v.d.H. was funded by NWO/TTW-Vidi grant 16588 . M.J.A.C. was funded by EU-H2020 project MERCES grant 689518 . L.L.G. was funded by NWO-VENI grant 016.Veni.181.087 . Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors
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