EGU23-12487
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12487
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Application of autonomous surveys technologies for the evaluation of habitat restoration interventions sites on coastal areas

Sergio Scanu1, Simone Bonamano2, Alice Madonia1, Viviana Piermattei2, Arianna Resnati2, Elena Scagnoli3, Fabrizio Varini2, and Daniele Piazzolla1
Sergio Scanu et al.
  • 1Ocean Predictions and Applications Division, Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici, Italy.
  • 2Laboratory of Experimental Oceanology and Marine Ecology, Department of Ecological and Biological sciences DEB, University of Tuscia, Port of Civitavecchia, Civitavecchia (RM), Italy
  • 3CURSA – Consorzio Universitario per la Ricerca Socioeconomica e per l’Ambiente, Italy

Among the objectives of marine ecology recently emerges the one concerning the maintenance and recovery of the ecological functions of ecosystems. This is particularly evident in the coastal marine environment, which is rich in habitats and species that provide many essential ecosystem services, like seagrasses. Seagrasses are important and productive coastal systems that provide nursery areas, carbon sequestration, protection from erosion, bioremediation, and oxygen production.

Seagrasses are subject to both indirect and direct impacts. Among the indirect impacts, the one linked to the perturbations of the sedimentary dynamics of the coastal marine environment, caused by various factors, such as changes in land use, regulation of water basins, and climate change, is particularly significant. Among the direct impacts, the one caused by anchorages or in general by all activities involving the destruction of substrates is significant (e.g., illegal fishing, development of coastal infrastructure, construction, or expansion of existing ports).

In this perspective, the use of innovative methodologies and technologies able to facilitate the monitoring activities of the coastal marine environment is particularly helpful. New cost-effective devices and autonomous survey technologies contribute to the optimization of the cost-benefit ratio in field survey activities, to the limitation of the impacts of the survey activities themselves on the habitats, and to favor the acquisition of more real-time data.

How to cite: Scanu, S., Bonamano, S., Madonia, A., Piermattei, V., Resnati, A., Scagnoli, E., Varini, F., and Piazzolla, D.: Application of autonomous surveys technologies for the evaluation of habitat restoration interventions sites on coastal areas, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-12487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-12487, 2023.