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Essay: Just 16 per cent of the world’s coastlines are in good shape – and many are so bad they can never fully recover

Coastal community

In an article published on The Conversation, Australian researchers BROOKE WILLIAMS, AMELIA WENGER and JAMES WATSON, look at what their research has revealed about the state of the world’s coastlines…

Only about 16 per cent of the world’s coastal regions are in relatively good condition, according to our world-first research released today, and many are so degraded they can’t be restored to their original state.

Places where the land meets the sea are crucial for our planet to function. They support biodiversity and the livelihoods of billions of people. But to date, understanding of the overall state of Earth’s coastal regions has been poor.

Coastal community

A coastal community. PICTURE: Michael Olsen/Unsplash

Our research, involving an international team of experts, revealed an alarming story. Humanity is putting heavy pressure on almost half the world’s coastal regions, including a large proportion of protected areas.

All nations must ramp up efforts to preserve and restore their coastal regions – and the time to start is right now.

“All nations must ramp up efforts to preserve and restore their coastal regions – and the time to start is right now.”

Our coasts are vital – and vulnerable
Coastal regions encompass some of the most diverse and unique ecosystems on Earth. They include coral reefs, kelp forests, seagrass, tidal flats, mangroves, estuaries, salt marshes, wetlands and coastal wooded habitat.

Many animal species, including those that migrate, rely on coastlines for breeding, foraging and protection. Coastal sites are also where rivers discharge, mangrove forests exchange nutrients with the ocean, and tidal flows are maintained.

Humans also need coastlines. Among other functions, they support our fisheries, protect us from storms and, importantly, store carbon to help mitigate climate change.

As much as 74 per cent of the world’s population live within 50 kilometres of the coast, and humans put pressure on coastal environments in myriad ways.

In marine environments, these pressures include:
• fishing at various intensities
• land-based nutrient, organic chemical and light pollution
• direct human impacts such as via recreation
• ocean shipping
• climate change (and associated ocean acidification, sea-level rise and increased sea surface temperatures).

On land, human pressures on our coastlines include:
• built environments, such as coastal developments
• disturbance
• electricity and transport infrastructure
• cropping and pasture lands, which clears ecosystems and causes chemical and nutrient runoff into waterways

To date, assessments of the world’s coastal regions have largely focused solely on either the land or ocean, rather than considering both realms together. Our research sought to address this.



A troubling picture
We integrated existing human impact maps for both land and ocean areas. This enabled us to assess the spectrum of human pressure across Earth’s coastal regions to identify those that are highly degraded and those intact.

Both maps use data up to the year 2013 – the most recent year for which cohesive data is available.

No coastal region was free from human influence. However, 15.5 per cent of Earth’s coastal regions remained intact – in other words, humans had exerted only low pressure. Many of the intact coastal regions were in Canada, followed by Russia and Greenland.

Large expanses of intact coast were also found elsewhere including Australia, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Chile, Brazil and the United States.

Troublingly, 47.9 per cent of coastal regions have been exposed to very high levels of human pressure. And for 84 per cent of countries, more than half their coastal regions were degraded.

What’s more, human pressures were high in about 43 per cent of protected coastal regions – those regions purportedly managed to conserve nature.

Coastal regions containing sea grasses, savannah and coral reefs had the highest levels of human pressure compared to other coastal ecosystems. Some coastal regions may be so degraded they cannot be restored. Coastal ecosystems are highly complex and once lost, it is likely impossible to restore them to their original state.


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So where to now?
It’s safe to say intact coastal regions are now rare. We urge governments to urgently conserve the coastal regions that remain in good condition, while restoring those that are degraded but can still be fixed.

To assist with this global task, we have made our dataset publicly available and free to use here.

Of course, the right conservation and restoration actions will vary from place to place. The actions might include, but are not limited to:
• improving environmental governance and laws related to encroaching development
• increasing well-resourced protected areas
• mitigating land-use change to prevent increased pollution run-off
• better community and local engagement
• strengthening Indigenous involvement in managing coastal regions
• effective management of fishing resources
• addressing climate change
• tackling geopolitical and socioeconomic drivers of damage to coastal environments.


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In addition, there’s an urgent need for national and global policies and programs to effectively managing areas where the land and ocean converge.

Humanity’s impact on Earth’s coastal regions is already severe and widespread. Without urgent change, the implications for both coastal biodiversity and society will become even more profound.The Conversation

Brooke Williams is a postdoctoral research fellow at The University of Queensland; Amelia Wenger, is a research associate in coral reef ecology at James Cook University, and James Watson, is a professor at The University of Queensland. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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