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Can restoring mangroves protect Miami from rising seas?  科技资讯
时间:2022-07-26   来源:[美国] Daily Climate

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two bikers pass by a woman sitting on a bench overlooking a large body of water with highrise buildings in the backgroundEnvironmentCan restoring mangroves protect Miami from rising seas?

Living shorelines featuring mangroves can stabilize coasts, limit flooding, and save landowners money.

Visitors bike in Miami next to Biscayne Bay. Much of Miami has been developed all the way to waterlines, leaving little room for mangrove habitats that could provide coastline protections from storms.ByLaura ParkerPhotographs ByAlicia VeraPublished July 26, 2022• 13 min readShareTweetEmail

Miami Beach, FloridaAs the 20th century dawned, mangroves blanketed this Florida island, which, at the time, was more of a swampy sandspit than solid land. Their gnarled roots standing knee-deep in tidal waters, mangroves were mainly known as the haunts of alligators, other reptiles, and blizzards of mosquitoes. And by 1915 they were gone. Carl Fisher, one of the founders of Miami Beach, had stripped the island bare as his first step toward transforming it into the fabled tourist playground it is today. 

The 21st century vision of the future is different: City leaders see a resilient Miami Beach at the front lines of climate change, adapting to rising seas and worsening storms by installing massive pumps, elevating streets—and, yes, bringing back the lowly mangrove, nature’s buffer against storm tides. Next week, volunteers plan to plant 680 mangrove trees in the city’s largest park to create a “living shoreline” along the same stretch where mangroves were hacked down a century ago.

small mangroves growing in shallow brown waterTwo-year-old mangrove trees sit on Tarpon Cove Island on Lake Worth Lagoon in West Palm Beach, Florida.The trees were planted two years ago by volunteers for The Nature Conservancy project. Please be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.

Mangroves may have been destined for eradication back then, but today they stand almost unequaled for their benefits to the environment. They’re still not an easy sell here though—even after Miami-Dade County recently rejected a proposal by the Army Corps of Engineers to construct a massive seawall. The county put forward no alternative plan—but mangroves, goes the argument, would spoil the view. 

The trees are usually not very tall, but they’re scruffy and gangly limbed. Not to mention the mosquitoes.

“I don’t think individuals generally think of mangrove shorelines as a desirable way to stabilize their properties,” says Lisa Spadafina, assistant director of the Miami-Dade division of environmental resources.

a woman stands surrounded by tall thin tree trunks with very few branches and leavesPlease be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.a small mangrove grows surrounded by sea grassPlease be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.Left: Marbelys Garriga, a doctoral candidate at Florida International University, explores a mangrove forest at Oleta River State Park in North Miami Beach. Mangroves, she says, are unlike any place on Earth, "the in-between place" where the sea meets the land.Right: Mangrove trees, including this one, were planted on Tarpon Cove Island in West Palm Beach two years ago by volunteers for The Nature Conservancy project.

Yet the mangrove forest’s ability to buffer against the energy of hurricane-force winds and surging waves is well documented. Mangroves annually shield 15 million people globally from harmful violent storms and save $65 billion in property damages, according to 2020 research published in Scientific Reports. A dramatic confirmation of their value occurred in 2004, when a giant tsunami, one of the deadliest in history, swept through the Indian Ocean. Villages in India and Malaysia that stood behind mangroves suffered less damage and had fewer deaths. In 2005, the Indian government banned deforestation of mangroves.

     原文来源:https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/can-restoring-mangroves-protect-miami-from-rising-seas

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