Molecular indicators of chronic seagrass stress: A new era in the management of seagrass ecosystems?
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
[Extract] Orth et al. (2006)'s influential paper – 'A global crisis for seagrass ecosystems' – highlighted the critical need for a targeted global conservation effort to protect, monitor, and successfully manage seagrasses. Yet seagrasses continue to face rapid global decline (Waycott et al., 2009), demonstrating that we have failed to avert the crisis. Central to the problem is the lack of awareness (by compliance regulators, policy makers, and the public) of the value of seagrasses in terms of the ecosystem services they provide (e.g. fisheries habitat, carbon sequestration, nutrient cycling). However, this is not the only problem. Even if seagrasses achieved a similar status as their coral reef counterparts, we are still left with a major scientific challenge, which is: to successfully detect and respond to stressed seagrasses before they 'pass the point of no return', as current methods of seagrass monitoring – morphological and physiological – do not always provide sufficient early warning of a meadows demise or a sufficient timeframe for successful rehabilitation actions. This is where sub-lethal, molecular indicators are required; where a molecular parameter will change at the onset of stress and if conditions do not change, the organism will eventually die.
Journal
Ecological Indicators
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Volume
38
ISBN/ISSN
1470-160X
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Pages Count
3
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Publisher
Elsevier
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EISSN
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DOI
10.1016/j.ecolind.2013.11.017