Coastal wetlands are some of the most valuable ecosystems on Earth because they provide many
ecological services for coastal security. However, these wetlands are seriously threatened by
accelerated climate change and intensive anthropogenic activities. To understand the impacts of
land reclamation on landscape change of coastal wetlands and the long-term effects of
disturbances of coastal wetlands on their sustainable management, we used time-series Landsat
imagery with an object-oriented classification and Digital Shoreline Analysis System to map
wetland changes within a reclaimed area in the Pudong District (PD), in Shanghai, China. Our
analysis indicated that from 1989 to 2013, 19,793.4 ha of coastal wetlands have been changed to
inland wetlands enclosed by a seawall and dike since 1989, thereby cutting off the exchange of
sediment and water flux between the wetlands and the coastal ocean. Subsequently, under the
increasing threats of anthropogenic activities, the wetland ecosystem collapsed sharply, in a
transformation chain of inland wetland (fresh swamp), artificial wetland (agriculture and
aquaculture wetland), and non-wetland (urban land). Under this explosive utilization following
coastal reclamation, only 8.9% of natural wetlands remain in the reclaimed area, which has
experienced an average annual wetland loss rate of 3.8% over the past 24 years. More than 80% of
the wetlands have been developed for agricultural, industrial, and urban land uses, leading to an
enormous loss of associated ecological services—benefits arising from the ecological functions
provided by wetland ecosystems, thereby undermining the coastal protection these wetlands
provided. Nevertheless, considerable regeneration of wetlands occurred because of their inherent
resilience. This paper addresses the importance of maintaining a balance between economic
growth and coastal ecological protection for sustainable management. It proposes a strategy for
how ecosystem-based land planning and ecological engineering should be applied to ensure the
effective and sustainable management of living shorelines so that the benefits of healthy
ecological functions accrue to coastal ecosystems.
Revised: August 23, 2019 |
Published: October 15, 2018
Citation
Wu W., Z. Yang, B. Tian, Y. Huang, Y. Zhou, and T. Zhang. 2018.Impacts of coastal reclamation on wetlands: Loss, resilience, and sustainable management.Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 210.PNNL-SA-135890.doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2018.06.013