catch, non-selective fishing methods, and destructive fishing. Understanding how multiple pressures reduce sustainable limits of harvest is necessary for effective fisheries manage- ment, which is crucial in a part of the world where seafood is both culturally and economically vital. While touted as a means of reducing pressure on wild stocks, aquaculture has increased noticeably since the 1990s, adding new pressures. These include nutrient and organic matter pollution lead- ing to eutrophication and eventual benthic anoxia, pollution through the release of antibiotics and biocides, and the intro- duction of non-indigenous species.
• Sea-floor integrity is affected mainly by bottom fishing, but also by dredging and offshore installations. Bottom fishing and dredging lead to the resuspension of sediment and organisms and to changes in the structure of benthic communities. The impact of offshore installations is not well researched.
• Changed hydrographic conditions caused by local disruption of circulation patterns by human-made structures, changes in freshwater fluxes to the sea, brine release from desalination plants, or climate change influence both nearshore and offshore areas. Changes in freshwater flows also affect sediment delivery to the coastal zone near river mouths, with impacts on coastline stability on key systems, such as dune-beach complexes.
• Marine food webs have been affected by fisheries pressures that led to the estimated reduction on average of one trophic level in the fisheries catches during the last half-century, in- creased jellyfish numbers, and reduced abundance of large predator species.
• Finally the state of biodiversity reflects the cumulative effects of the pressures affecting the Mediterranean coastal and ma- rine environment. Although there is still high diversity in the Mediterranean, some species of reptiles, marine mammals, birds, and fish are reaching dangerously low abundance lev- els. The Mediterranean also hosts a diverse array of habitats of commercial, ecological, and cultural importance. Many are under a variety of pressures. Complicating the issue, many off- shore areas, where upwellings develop and seamounts provide important habitat, are located beyond national jurisdiction.
This picture of multiple pressures acting simultaneously, and af- fecting different components of the Mediterranean marine and coastal environment, to undermine ecosystem health and resil- ience, and put certain species and habitats at high risk, is cer- tainly complex. Future monitoring will allow for more robust and systematic analyses of precisely how these pressures and their impacts affect the Mediterranean as a whole, and the economies and well-being of coastal countries and communities. This infor- mation is more urgently needed than ever, as countries define top priorities for management with limited time and resources with which to implement plans. The Mediterranean continues to be a valuable, treasured region, yet one clearly under threat; the commitment of countries that border it remains the only hope that these coastal and marine ecosystems will thrive despite these growing pressures.
Response analysis and recommendations
As use of Mediterranean coastal and marine resources and space grows, the ability of these interconnected ecosystems to deliver
12 STATE OF THE MEDITERRANEAN MARINE AND COASTAL ENVIRONMENT
goods and services is compromised. Yet there is every reason for hope, as individual countries have tackled marine issues admira- bly, and the region as a whole is moving towards a more effective and efficient Ecosystem Approach. Such an Ecosystem Approach recognizes the linkages between various habitats, and between the environment and the biota it supports, and the economies and human well-being of coastal communities. The Ecosystem Approach allows priorities for management to emerge, and at the same time, creates efficiency in addressing management and conservation needs.
Contracting Parties to the Barcelona Convention have commit- ted to this Ecosystem Approach; they have dedicated time and resources, as well as data, to the effort to more systematically ad- dress threats, and the drivers behind those threats. Understand- ing of the myriad values that natural infrastructure and the Sea as a whole provide has helped raise awareness, and has made the push for more effective management ever more urgent.
At the moment the information on the human pressures and their impacts in the Mediterranean is unevenly distributed de- pending on the subject and also in terms of space and time. Yet it is indisputable that a regionally shared understanding of how human activities impact the Mediterranean coastal and marine environment, and how those impacts in turn affect industries, local livelihoods, and human well-being, is developing. More ef- fective management responses at both the country level and through international cooperation can be expected to flow from coordinated monitoring and systematic understanding of these pressures, allowing for prioritisation of the many complicated management issues that require management responses. With this systematic and coordinated framework for prioritisation, the sectorial management responses will mitigate the most harm- ful impacts, leading to fulfilment of an effective Ecosystem Ap- proach that safeguards the vital biodiversity and ecosystem ser- vices upon which Mediterranean countries depend.
The net cumulative impact of the myriad of pressures affecting different locations within the Mediterranean is difficult to ac- curately determine beyond modelling efforts based on expert judgement due to previous non-integrated monitoring that fo- cuses on single species, sites, or sectors. This drives home the need for a systematic monitoring regime that will allow accurate assessments of the state of the Mediterranean coastal and ma- rine environment. In addition to establishing a systematic moni- toring regime to derive needed information on condition and trends, future research will have to elucidate cause-effect rela- tionships, in order to support the establishment of management measures that lead to the desired outcomes.
The Ecosystem Approach provides an integrated and holistic framework to give a much-needed look at, for example, the in- fluence that freshwater use in watersheds and land use in coastal areas, in relation to urbanisation, industrialisation, and increas- ing coastal tourism, has on coastal and marine ecosystem health, productivity, and the delivery of valuable ecosystem services.
The commitment of the Contracting Parties to an Ecosystem Ap- proach signals the extent to which countries value the coastal and marine resources and environments of the Mediterranean. Tangible progress towards the vision of “A healthy Mediterra- nean with marine and coastal ecosystems that are productive and biologically diverse for the benefit of present and future
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