A hierarchical approach to the examination of the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem service flows across coastal margins.

Lead Research Organisation: NERC CEH (Up to 30.11.2019)
Department Name: Emmett

Abstract

CBESS Summary:

The health of the UK's coastlines is inextricably linked to our success as an island nation, and resonates through our economy, our recreation, and our culture. Most pressingly, of all the UK's many and varied landscapes, its coastal systems are the ones most immediately sensitive to climate change. As temperatures increase, sea levels will rise and the forces experienced where land and sea meet will become more destructive. Salt marshes, mudflats, beaches and rocky shores will all be affected but, of these areas, the most sensitive are the mudflats and salt marshes that are common features of coastal systems, and which comprise just over half of the UK's total estuarine area. Not only do these landscapes support a wide range of economically valuable animal and plant species, they also act as sites of carbon storage, nutrient recycling, and pollutant capture and destruction. Their preservation is, therefore, of the utmost importance, requiring active and informed management to save them for future generations. The Natural Environment Research Council's call to help understand the landscape-scale links between the functions that these systems provide (ecosystem service flows) and the organisms that help provide these services (biodiversity stocks) offers an important opportunity to move beyond most previous work in this field, which has been conducted at small or laboratory scales. While of foundational scientific importance, the implications of laboratory studies can be hard to translate into policy, and coastal managers require a clearer evidence base to understand how ecosystem service flows operate at much larger spatial scales, e.g. entire salt marshes or regions of intertidal flat and salt marshes. The programme we are proposing 'A hierarchical approach to the examination of the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem service flows across coastal margins' (CBESS) will provide such a large scale understanding. Our consortium of UK experts ranges from microbial ecologists, through environmental economists, to mathematical modellers, including organisations like the BTO and the RSPB, who have immediate and vested interest in the sustainable use of coastal wetlands.

Together, CBESS will create a study that spans the landscape scale, investigating how biodiversity stocks provide the following ecosystem services (cf. National Ecosystem Assessment).

- Supporting' services: nutrient cycling, healthy habitat
- Provisioning services; goods obtained from the landscape
- Regulating' services: coastal protection, climate regulation (greenhouse gas exchange, carbon sequestration)
- Cultural services: Recreation (walking, canoeing, angling, birding, hunting and beauty)

CBESS will combine the detailed study of two regional landscapes with a broad-scale UK-wide study to allow both specific and general conclusions to be drawn. The Regional study will compare two areas of great local and national importance: Morecambe Bay on the west coast and the Essex coastline on the east coast. We will carry out biological and physical surveys at more than 600 stations and use these results to clarify how biodiversity can provide these important ecosystem functions. This information will be shared with those interested in using and managing coastal systems and, after our analysis; we will propose practical methods and improved tools for the future analysis, management, and sustainability of the UK's coastal wetlands.

Planned Impact

CBESS Impact Summary:

Who will benefit from this research, and how?

Commercial private sector and the knowledge economy: CBESS provides new knowledge, new data, and tools to assist the sustainable management of coastal landscapes. Theme 5 of CBESS will also deliver new and innovative methodologies, equipment, techniques, and technologies to assess the role of biodiversity in the provision of ecosystems services. This framework is based on the HiMOM (Hierarchical monitoring of marine systems) EU programme, in providing a 'tool kit' and case studies for use by coastal managers. The research itself is based on an interdisciplinary framework that will provide a model for future programmes in the UK and abroad, through initiatives such as the Cambridge Conservation Initiative, the world's largest cluster of conservation organisations that focus on biodiversity research, policy and practice. Since many commercial interests rely on sustainable wetland socio-ecosystem service flows, beneficiaries will be correspondingly varied: Recreation (e.g. wildfowling, angling, walking) and commerce (e.g. fisheries, farming, cafes, museums, exhibits) that uses the local landscape will see long-term benefits.
Policy professionals, governmental and devolved governmental organisations: The CBESS consortium hinges on the full involvement (see attached Letters of Support) of a wide range of partner organisations with an explicit interest in policy and the management of coastal wetlands. Members will disseminate information far beyond the immediate circle of CBESS. Our Partners include the Government Office for Science, the Environment Agency and its devolved counterparts (NIEA, SEPA), the Freshwater Biological Association, the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, and The James Hutton Institute. In addition, through the Marine Alliance for Science and Technology for Scotland (MASTS), the Consortium has access to the Scottish Marine Forum, Marine Scotland, Marine Science Scotland, The Centre of Expertise for Waters, and the Centre of Expertise for Climate Change; a constituency of several thousand members.

The British public: The intrinsic value of publically accessible wetland is widely recognised, enhancing our culture, quality of life, and health. Given that most people experience their surroundings at, and live their daily lives within, the 'landscape' scale, CBESS will enhance evidence based policy-making and support robust legislation at a local, regional, national and international level (see Pathways to Impact).

Voluntary sectors and wider public: Wetland wildlife habitats attract dedicated support from the voluntary sector (e.g The British Trust for Ornithology, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, the Essex Wildlife Trust). CBESS's econometric approach will examine the scale-dependence of wetland use by public, recreational (e.g fishing, birdwatching) and voluntary groups (Litter clearance, nature guides), adding to our Partners' understanding of overall wetland service provision. Through our Partners, new groups will become part of the CBESS constituency and informed about the project.
Skills training. Three areas of benefit arise from CBESS. In addition to academic progression, early career researchers will gain experience in planning and conducting a large and complex programme. PhDs associated with CBESS will gain from the interdisciplinary, and highly cooperative, nature of the work. Finally, areas of CBESS work lie in the traditional skills of sampling and taxonomy (cf. floral and infaunal biodiversity) which will be supported within CBESS and staff encourage to develop skills (taxonomy courses include in costings).

Publications

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Ford H (2016) Soil stabilization linked to plant diversity and environmental context in coastal wetlands. in Journal of vegetation science : official organ of the International Association for Vegetation Science

 
Description One of our most exciting preliminary findings is that vegetation biodiversity appears to boost the stability of coastal saltmarsh soils against erosion. Experiments in hydrological flumes show that cores of saltmarsh turf and soil that are exposed to strong currents and waves take a longer time to erode when they have a high number of vegetation species than when they have a low number of species in them. These experimental results are preliminary and we are in the process of exploring the source of this apparent biodiversity effect.
Exploitation Route Our findings will be of signicant use to the wider scientific community interested in understanding the role of biodiversity to the way our ecosystem operate. Governments and environmental managers are seeking to balance the exploitation of coastal resources against the needs to conserve biodiversity. We hope to assist this community by providing increased research evidence regarding the relative importance of biodiversity to the benefits that society reaps from ecosystems. We hope to work closely with government agencies to ensure that our main project findings will inform into future management strategies. One way in which we are seeking to do that is by providing tools for predicting the distribution of ecosystem benefits across the coastal landscape.
Sectors Creative Economy,Environment

URL http://synergy.st-andrews.ac.uk/cbess/
 
Description The saltmarsh app has been use by 14 different organisations for research, teaching, carbon stock assessment of protected areas, mitigation and restoration
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Creative Economy,Education,Environment
Impact Types Economic

 
Description Sêr Cymru National Research Network for Low carbon Energy and the Environment (NRN-LCEE) (http://www.nrn-lcee.ac.uk/)
Amount £568,000 (GBP)
Organisation Government of Wales 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2014 
End 11/2018
 
Title The saltmarsh app 
Description The Saltmarsh App was developed by thedconcept pvt ltd and created by the University of St Andrews, Bangor University and the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. The Saltmarsh App was developed to use simple observations of plant communities and soil type to predict carbon stores in English sand Welsh salt marshes. There are two ways to collect data - most people would probably go for the short 5-minute method. Both recommend using a small trowel or soil sample tube tool. It's available for Apple iOS and Android. There is a crowd-sourcing aspect to the app as the data is gathered to investigate the actual and potential contribution of UK salt marshes to the management of climate change. 
Type Of Technology Webtool/Application 
Year Produced 2016 
Impact The app has been use by 14 different organisations for research, teaching, carbon stock assessment of protected areas, mitigation and restoration 
URL http://www.saltmarshapp.com
 
Description Liaison meeting with Natural Resources Wales 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The meeting centered on gaining an understanding of how NRW practitioners perceive and use the concept of Ecosystem services in decision making and management of the Welsh natural environment. The CBESS team gained a good insight into the use of the ecosystem approach to natural management in Wales, including underpinning policy drivers. cusseNRW gained an insight to what the CBESS project has achieve so far. NRW staff were very interested in utilising CBESS project data for making future projectsion of the distribtion of ecosystem services in the coastal environment of Wales. The potential for complying with NRW wishes were discussed.

The CBESS team is currently exploring the potential for generating a decision-support tool for NRW specifically minded at mapping the distribution of ecosystem services in Wales.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description National Saltmarsh Specialists Forum 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The meeting is designed to bring policy makers, academics and 'end users' together primarily as a communication network for individuals (with a national remit or capability) to network, take advice, share best practise, develop initiatives, and form collaborations on saltmarsh related issues.

Greater networking opportunities for delegates and flow of information from policy to science to practise and visa versa
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012
 
Description National resources Wales; CBESS workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact CBESS-NRW Workshop to disseminate CBESS outputs and to open a dialogue about management and research activities in marsh-mudflat environments. The meeting attracted 25 delegates, mainly from NRW (EA Wales, Welsh Forestry Commission and CCW) and the Fisheries Department of Welsh Assembly Government. Ten talks were given on science outputs by the CBESS team, followed by 3 presentations by NRW on their remits concerned with coastal biodiversity-ecosystem services management and policy.

Higher profile for CBESS project in Wales and the CBESS team
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013