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Volume 7, Issue 2 (Suppl)

J Ecosyst Ecography, an open access journal

ISSN:2157-7625

September 18-20, 2017

September 18-20, 2017 Toronto, Canada

Joint Conference

International Conference on

International Conference on

Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology

&

Ecology and Ecosystems

Shifting paradigms in coastal restoration: Six decades' lessons fromChina

Zezheng Liu

1

, Baoshan Cui

1

and

Qiang He

2

1

Beijing Normal University, China

2

Duke University, USA

W

ith accelerating degradation of coastal environment worldwide, restoration has been elevated as a global strategy to enhance

the functioning and social services of coastal ecosystems. While many developing countries suffer from intense coastal

degradation, current understanding of the science and practice of their coastal restorations is extremely limited. Based on analysis of

>1000 restoration projects, we provide the first synthesis of China’s coastal restorations. We show that China’s coastal restoration has

recently entered a rapidly developing stage, with an increasing number of restoration projects carried out in multiple types of coastal

ecosystems. While long-term, national-level restorations enforced by the government appear promising for some coastal ecosystems,

especially mangroves, restorations of many other coastal ecosystems, such as salt marshes, seagrasses and coral reefs, have been

much less implemented, likely due to under-appreciation of their ecosystem services values. Furthermore, the planning, techniques,

research/assessment, and participation models underlying current restorations remain largely inadequate for restoration to effectively

halt rapid coastal degradation. To promote success, we propose a framework where paradigms in current restorations from planning

to implementation and assessment are transformed in multiple ways. Our study has broad implications for coastal environmental

management policies and practices, and should inform sustainable development of coupled human-ocean systems in many countries.

Biography

Zezheng Liu has his research interests in wetland ecology and hydrology, wetland restoration, and wetland management. Currently, he is particularly interested in

how the interactive processes of ecological communities, such as competition, facilitation, and food web interactions, to structure their environments and influence

fundamental ecosystem processes such as plant growth and productivity. Such fundamental theories on community assembly and ecosystem functioning has

important implications for the restoration of damaged habitats.

zzliu@mail.bnu.edu.cn

Zezheng Liu et al., J Ecosyst Ecography 2017, 7:2 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7625-C1-029