Paxton Avery B, Swannack Todd M, Piercy Candice D, Altman Safra, Poussard Leanne, Puckett Brandon J, Storlazzi Curt D, Viehman T Shay
National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, National Ocean Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 101 Pivers Island Road, Beaufort, NC, 28516, USA.
U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center, 3909 Halls Ferry Road, Vicksburg, MS, 39180, USA.
Environ Evid. 2023 Sep 15;12(1):19. doi: 10.1186/s13750-023-00313-2.
Shallow, tropical coral reefs face compounding threats from habitat degradation due to coastal development and pollution, impacts from storms and sea-level rise, and pulse disturbances like blast fishing, mining, dredging, and ship groundings that reduce coral reefs' height and variability. One approach toward restoring coral reef structure from these threats is deploying built structures. Built structures range from engineered modules and repurposed materials to underwater sculptures and intentionally placed natural rocks. Restoration practitioners and coastal managers increasingly consider incorporating built structures, including nature-based solutions, into coral reef-related applications. Yet, synthesized evidence on the ecological and physical performance of built structure interventions across a variety of contexts (e.g., restoration, coastal protection, mitigation, tourism) is not readily available to guide decisions. To help inform management decisions, here we aim to document the global evidence base on the ecological and physical performance of built structures in shallow (≤ 30 m) tropical (35° N to 35° S latitude) coral ecosystems. The collated evidence base on use cases and associated ecological and physical outcomes of built structure interventions can help inform future consideration of built structures in reef restoration design, siting, and implementation.
To discover evidence on the performance of built structures in coral reef-related applications, such as restoration, mitigation, and coastal protection, primary literature will be searched across indexing platforms, bibliographic databases, open discovery citation indexes, a web-based search engine, a novel literature discovery tool, and organizational websites. The geographic scope of the search is global, and there is no limitation to temporal scope. Primary literature will be screened first at the level of title and abstract and then at the full text level against defined eligibility criteria for the population, intervention, study type, and outcomes of interest. Metadata will be extracted from studies that pass both screening levels. The resulting data will be analyzed to determine the distribution and abundance of evidence. Results will be made publicly available and reported in a systematic map that includes a narrative description, identifies evidence clusters and gaps, and outlines future research directions on the use of built structures in coral reef-related applications.
浅海热带珊瑚礁面临着多种复合威胁,包括因海岸开发和污染导致的栖息地退化、风暴和海平面上升的影响,以及诸如爆破捕鱼、采矿、疏浚和船舶搁浅等脉冲干扰,这些都降低了珊瑚礁的高度和多样性。从这些威胁中恢复珊瑚礁结构的一种方法是部署人造结构。人造结构的范围从工程模块和 repurposed 材料到水下雕塑和特意放置的天然岩石。恢复从业者和海岸管理者越来越多地考虑将人造结构,包括基于自然的解决方案,纳入与珊瑚礁相关的应用中。然而,关于人造结构干预在各种背景下(如恢复、海岸保护、缓解、旅游)的生态和物理性能的综合证据并不容易获取,难以指导决策。为了帮助为管理决策提供信息,在此我们旨在记录关于浅海(≤ 30米)热带(北纬35°至南纬35°)珊瑚生态系统中人造结构的生态和物理性能的全球证据库。整理后的关于人造结构干预的用例及相关生态和物理结果的证据库,有助于为未来在珊瑚礁恢复设计、选址和实施中考虑人造结构提供参考。
为了发现关于人造结构在与珊瑚礁相关应用(如恢复、缓解和海岸保护)中的性能的证据,将在索引平台、书目数据库、开放发现引文索引、基于网络的搜索引擎、一种新型文献发现工具和组织网站上搜索原始文献。搜索的地理范围是全球,时间范围没有限制。原始文献将首先在标题和摘要层面进行筛选,然后在全文层面根据针对感兴趣的人群、干预措施、研究类型和结果定义的纳入标准进行筛选。将从通过两个筛选层面的研究中提取元数据。对所得数据进行分析,以确定证据的分布和丰富程度。结果将公开提供,并在一份系统地图中报告,该地图包括叙述性描述、识别证据集群和差距,并概述在与珊瑚礁相关应用中使用人造结构的未来研究方向。