TY - JOUR
T1 - European Native Oyster Reef Ecosystems Are Universally Collapsed
AU - Zu ermgassen, Philine s. e.
AU - Mccormick, Hannah
AU - Debney, Alison
AU - Fariñas‐franco, José m.
AU - Gamble, Celine
AU - Gillies, Chris
AU - Hancock, Boze
AU - Laugen, Ane t.
AU - Pouvreau, Stéphane
AU - Preston, Joanne
AU - Sanderson, William g.
AU - Strand, Åsa
AU - Thurstan, Ruth h.
PY - 2024/12/4
Y1 - 2024/12/4
N2 - Oyster reefs are often referred to as the temperate functional equivalent of coral reefs. Yet evidence for this analogy was lacking for the European native species Ostrea edulis. Historical data provide a unique opportunity to develop a robust definition for this ecosystem type, confirm that O. edulis are large-scale biogenic reef builders, and assess its current conservation status. Today, O. edulis occur as scattered individuals or, rarely, as dense clumps over a few m2. Yet historically, O. edulis reef ecosystems persisted at large scales (several km2), with individual reefs within the ecosystems present at the scale of several hectares. Using the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems Framework, we conclude the European native oyster reef ecosystem type is collapsed under three of five criteria (A: reduction in geographic distribution, B: restricted geographic range, and D: disruption of biotic processes and interactions). Criterion C (environmental degradation) was data deficient, and Criterion E (quantitative risk analysis) was not completed as the ecosystem was already deemed collapsed. Our assessment has important implications for conservation policy and action, highlighting that the habitat definitions on which conservation policies are currently based reflect a highly shifted baseline, and that the scale of current restoration efforts falls far short of what is necessary for ecosystem recovery.
AB - Oyster reefs are often referred to as the temperate functional equivalent of coral reefs. Yet evidence for this analogy was lacking for the European native species Ostrea edulis. Historical data provide a unique opportunity to develop a robust definition for this ecosystem type, confirm that O. edulis are large-scale biogenic reef builders, and assess its current conservation status. Today, O. edulis occur as scattered individuals or, rarely, as dense clumps over a few m2. Yet historically, O. edulis reef ecosystems persisted at large scales (several km2), with individual reefs within the ecosystems present at the scale of several hectares. Using the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems Framework, we conclude the European native oyster reef ecosystem type is collapsed under three of five criteria (A: reduction in geographic distribution, B: restricted geographic range, and D: disruption of biotic processes and interactions). Criterion C (environmental degradation) was data deficient, and Criterion E (quantitative risk analysis) was not completed as the ecosystem was already deemed collapsed. Our assessment has important implications for conservation policy and action, highlighting that the habitat definitions on which conservation policies are currently based reflect a highly shifted baseline, and that the scale of current restoration efforts falls far short of what is necessary for ecosystem recovery.
KW - IUCN Ecosystem Red List
KW - Ostrea edulis
KW - habitat restoration
KW - historical ecology
KW - shellfish reef
KW - shifted baseline
KW - threats
U2 - 10.1111/conl.13068
DO - 10.1111/conl.13068
M3 - Article
SN - 1755-263X
JO - Conservation Letters
JF - Conservation Letters
M1 - e13068
ER -