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One hundred priority questions for advancing seagrass conservation in Europe

Plants People Planet 2024 33 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lina Mtwana Nordlund, Eduardo Infantes, Carmen B. de los Santos, João Canning‐Clode, Stefania Klayn, Richard K. F. Unsworth, Carmen B. de los Santos, Óscar Serrano, Stefania Klayn, Eduardo Infantes, Richard K. F. Unsworth, Stefania Klayn, Stefania Klayn, Sieglind Wallner‐Hahn, Laura L. Govers, João Canning‐Clode, Eduardo Infantes, Carmen B. de los Santos, João Canning‐Clode, Carmen B. de los Santos, Eduardo Infantes, Eduardo Infantes, João Canning‐Clode, Lavenia Ratnarajah, Periklis Kleitou, João Gama Monteiro, João Gama Monteiro, Pedro Beca‐Carretero, Eduardo Infantes, João Canning‐Clode, João Gama Monteiro, João Canning‐Clode, João Canning‐Clode, João Canning‐Clode, Elmīra Boikova, Elmīra Boikova, Óscar Serrano, João Canning‐Clode, João Gama Monteiro, João Canning‐Clode, James C. Bull, Rosa M. Chefaoui, Carmen B. de los Santos, Nerea Piñeiro‐Juncal, Karine Gagnon, João Canning‐Clode, Joxe Mikel Garmendia, Elitsa Hineva, Francesca Gizzi, Elitsa Hineva, Laura L. Govers, Carmen B. de los Santos, Camilla Gustafsson, Elitsa Hineva, João Canning‐Clode, Eduardo Infantes, João Canning‐Clode, Marlene Jahnke, Periklis Kleitou, Hilary Kennedy, Tiia Möller, Stefania Klayn, Tiia Möller, João Gama Monteiro, Nerea Piñeiro‐Juncal, Emanuele Ponis, Vasillis Papathanasiou, Dimitris Poursanidis, Riccardo Pieraccini, Óscar Serrano, Ana I. Sousa, Susanne Schäfer, Francesca Rossi, Dominik Sebastian Storey, Marieke M. van Katwijk, Dave Wall, Dave Wall, Emma A. Ward, Robert Wilkes

Summary

European researchers identified 100 key questions that need answering to better protect seagrass ecosystems, which are underwater meadows vital for carbon storage, biodiversity, and coastal protection. While not directly about microplastics, seagrass beds act as filters that can trap microplastic pollution and are themselves threatened by it. Protecting these ecosystems could play an important role in reducing microplastic contamination in coastal waters.

Societal Impact Statement Seagrass ecosystems are of fundamental importance to our planet and wellbeing. Seagrasses are marine flowering plants, which engineer ecosystems that provide a multitude of ecosystem services, for example, blue foods and carbon sequestration. Seagrass ecosystems have largely been degraded across much of their global range. There is now increasing interest in the conservation and restoration of these systems, particularly in the context of the climate emergency and the biodiversity crisis. The collation of 100 questions from experts across Europe could, if answered, improve our ability to conserve and restore these systems by facilitating a fundamental shift in the success of such work. Summary Seagrass meadows provide numerous ecosystem services including biodiversity, coastal protection, and carbon sequestration. In Europe, seagrasses can be found in shallow sheltered waters along coastlines, in estuaries & lagoons, and around islands, but their distribution has declined. Factors such as poor water quality, coastal modification, mechanical damage, overfishing, land‐sea interactions, climate change and disease have reduced the coverage of Europe’s seagrasses necessitating their recovery. Research, monitoring and conservation efforts on seagrass ecosystems in Europe are mostly uncoordinated and biased towards certain species and regions, resulting in inadequate delivery of critical information for their management. Here, we aim to identify the 100 priority questions, that if addressed would strongly advance seagrass monitoring, research and conservation in Europe. Using a Delphi method, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers with seagrass experience from across Europe and with diverse seagrass expertise participated in the process that involved the formulation of research questions, a voting process and an online workshop to identify the final list of the 100 questions. The final list of questions covers areas across nine themes: Biodiversity & Ecology; Ecosystem services; Blue carbon; Fishery support; Drivers, Threats, Resilience & Response; Monitoring & Assessment; Conservation & Restoration; Governance, Policy & Management; and Communication. Answering these questions will fill current knowledge gaps and place European seagrass onto a positive trajectory of recovery.

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