PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Are we ready for scaling up restoration actions? An insight from Mediterranean macroalgal canopies.

  • Laura Tamburello,
  • Loredana Papa,
  • Giuseppe Guarnieri,
  • Laura Basconi,
  • Serena Zampardi,
  • Maria Beatrice Scipione,
  • Antonio Terlizzi,
  • Valerio Zupo,
  • Simonetta Fraschetti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224477
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. e0224477

Abstract

Read online

Extensive loss of macroalgal forests advocates for large-scale restoration interventions, to compensate habitat degradation and recover the associated ecological functions and services. Yet, restoration attempts have generally been limited to small spatial extensions, with the principal aim of developing efficient restoration techniques. Here, the success of outplanting Cystoseira amentacea v. stricta germlings cultured in aquaria was experimentally explored at a scale of tens of kms, by means of a multifactorial experimental design. In the intertidal rocky shores of SE Italy, locations with a continuous distribution for hundreds of meters or with few thalli forming patches of few centimeters of C. amentacea canopy were selected. In each location, the effects of adult conspecifics and the exclusion of macrograzers (salema fish and sea urchins) on the survival of germlings were tested. We evaluated the most critical determinants of mortality for germlings, including the overlooked pressure of mesograzers (e.g. amphipods, small mollusks, polychaetes). Despite the high mortality observed during outplanting and early settlement stages, survival of C. amentacea germlings was consistently favored by the exclusion of macrograzers, while the presence of adult conspecifics had no effects. In addition, the cost analysis of the interventions showed the feasibility of the ex-situ method, representing an essential tool for preserving Cystoseira forests. Large scale restoration is possible but requires baseline information with an in-depth knowledge of the species ecology and of the areas to be restored, together with the development of specific cultivation protocols to make consistently efficient restoration interventions.