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Seagrass restoration in the greater Southeast Asia region: techniques, species, survival and comparisons among investigations
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Seagrass restoration in the greater Southeast Asia region: techniques, species, survival and comparisons among investigations

Anitra Thorhaug, Jennifer Joan Verduin, Wawan Kiswara, Anhana Prathep, Xiaoping Huang, John Barry Gallagher, Tzuen-Kiat Yap, Rohani Ambo-Rappe, Susan E. Dorward, Arthur Schwarz, …
Frontiers in Marine Science, Vol.12, 1505222
2025
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Published1.19 MBDownloadView
CC BY V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

seagrass restoration seagrass restoration in Souteast Asian region seagrass restoration <italic>Enhalus acoroides</italic> seagrass restoration <italic>Thalassia hemprechii</italic> seagrass restoration southeast Asia survival and success seagrass restoration <italic>Halophila ovalis</italic>
The greater Southeast Asian region contains the largest global extent of tropical seagrass; however, anthropogenic degradation is estimated to be greater than 7% per year. Although the areal extent of seagrass is presently 36,765 km 2 , Fortes group estimates that 50% of the original seagrass has been degraded from a variety of impacts. One set of solutions to degradation is to restore tropical seagrass successfully, for which information from past results is needed to avoid failures. Van Katwijk, Thorhaug and others provided a global seagrass restoration review of 1,786 trials, but did not include the full Southeast Asian regional information. Thus, we review findings from 228 trials in the greater Southeast Asian region, involving 305,807 restored units with an extent of 372,649 m 2 . Seagrasses planted with varying successes include 13 tropical species and five subtropical or near-subtemperate species. We compare methodologies as well as key factors of light level, energetics, and depth. This review demonstrates the highest survival in seagrass restoration employing sprigs or plugs at medium depths (2–4 m) with adequate light levels in medium to low energetics planting one to several dominant species. Substrate anchors improved successful establishment. Information gaps occur in quantified monitoring of seagrass services reassembled with tropical-seagrass restoration; thus, fisheries’ nursery potentials are not provided. Future actions need national seagrass restoration policies and plans to restore degraded seagrasses. At present, such policies and plans are non-existent in most greater Southeast Asian regional nations, with the exceptions of Australia and the Philippines, although some nations have national plans for restoring corals or mangroves.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.2 Marine Biology
3.2.1182 Coastal Vegetation
Web Of Science research areas
Environmental Sciences
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ESI research areas
Plant & Animal Science
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