Affiliation:
1. Conservation Ecology Group, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences (GELIFES) University of Groningen Groningen The Netherlands
2. Tvärminne Zoological Station, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Helsinki Hanko Finland
3. The Fieldwork Company Groningen The Netherlands
4. Rijkswaterstaat Noord‐Nederland Leeuwarden The Netherlands
5. Natuurmonumenten Paterswolde The Netherlands
6. Department of Coastal Systems Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ) Den Burg The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Dwarf eelgrass, Zostera noltii, is an important ecosystem engineer that creates dense meadows along the coasts of Europe and Northwest Africa. During the last century, this seagrass species suffered severe population declines, and to counteract these losses, restoration has emerged as an important management tool. Thus far, restoration efforts with Z. noltii have only been performed with shoot‐ and core‐based methods, which are challenging to upscale sustainably.
Here, we explored if Z. noltii can be restored with seeds, thus potentially offering an upscalable solution for future restoration efforts. With the newly developed dispenser injection seeding (DIS) method, we tried seed‐based Z. noltii restoration in the intertidal Wadden Sea. With a field experiment, we investigated how seeding depth (1.5 and 3 cm) and seed amount (5, 10 and 20 seeds/injection) affected Z. noltii recruitment success and efficiency.
Most importantly, our results show that Z. noltii can be restored with seeds, as 3 months after seeding, 184 individual patches had emerged from our 7000 seeds (2.6% recruitment). Recruitment success (number of restored patches/plot) was enhanced by higher seed amounts (20 > 5 seeds/injection), while the opposite was true for recruitment efficiency (number of restored patches/seed), which was reduced by higher seed amounts (20 < 5 seeds/injection). Restored Z. noltii survived the first winter in all experimental plots, but seagrass cover (square metre/plot) reduced in two‐thirds of the plots compared to the first growing season.
In conclusion, our findings show the potential of seed‐based Z. noltii restoration and provide insights on how upscaling of restoration efforts for this species can be performed more efficiently and sustainably in the future.