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Challenges in coastal ecosystem Sustainability: Drivers of water quality degradation and their ecological impact

Marine Environmental Research 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Keerthi Sri Senarathna Atapaththu, Sandamali Sakunthala Herath, Ganadeepan Subramanuiam, Yapa Mudiyanselage Ajith Lalith Weerasinghe Yapa, Shirani M. K. Widana Gamage, Kanaji Masakorala, B.K.K.K. Jinadasa, Mei‐Lin Wu

Summary

This review examines multiple drivers of water quality degradation in coastal ecosystems—including nutrient pollution, sedimentation, microplastics, and climate change—and discusses management strategies for improving coastal ecosystem sustainability.

Coastal waters are home to a diverse range of habitats forming highly diverse transitional ecosystems such as mangroves, seagrass beds, coral reefs, and salt marshes. The health of these ecosystems is closely tied to the surrounding coastal environment, making them highly vulnerable to environmental changes that can significantly disrupt the entire coastal ecosystem. Ensuring the sustainability of these ecosystems requires a deep understanding of the factors contributing to coastal water degradation and their implications for effective ecosystem management. This review focuses on key drivers of coastal environmental deterioration such as nutrient loading, heavy metals, microplastics, toxic substances, construction activities, and their ecological consequences. These factors, whether directly or indirectly, impact aquatic organisms' physiological and biochemical processes while altering the physical characteristics of coastal landscapes, ultimately disrupting vital ecological functions. Adopting a multidisciplinary approach that brings researchers, environmental activists, stakeholders, and policymakers together is vital to start an effective dialogue for the sustainable management of coastal habitats.

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