Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning

Abstract The marine management community is missing critical opportunities to incorporate restoration into coastal planning as well as formal marine spatial planning (MSP) initiatives. Not committing to restoration as decisions are made on how to allocate ocean space and resources means that priorit...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tundi Agardy, Boze Hancock, Anne Birch, Elizabeth McLeod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-06-01
Series:Discover Conservation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s44353-025-00039-x
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849686213056790528
author Tundi Agardy
Boze Hancock
Anne Birch
Elizabeth McLeod
author_facet Tundi Agardy
Boze Hancock
Anne Birch
Elizabeth McLeod
author_sort Tundi Agardy
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The marine management community is missing critical opportunities to incorporate restoration into coastal planning as well as formal marine spatial planning (MSP) initiatives. Not committing to restoration as decisions are made on how to allocate ocean space and resources means that priority areas for restoration are being ignored, and the potential for using management to restore ecosystem services and improve human well-being may not be met. Large scale restoration, widely acknowledged as needed, is much more difficult in the absence of a systematic framework to remove pressures or practice active reconstruction in key ecologically linked habitats. To address this deficit, we highlight how restoration can be brought into MSP processes across eight waypoints: (1) determining if restoration can be added as a goal of existing MSP; (2) scoping the problems to craft the correct restoration solutions in the planning area; (3) committing to reconciling development with conservation; (4) utilizing MSP frameworks for restoration in a constellation of interlinked sites; (5) doing participatory master planning to set priorities for action; (6) planning with long time horizons and adaptation in mind; (7) building the foundation for long-term financing; and (8) coming to scale. We show how linking restoration planning with MSP has reciprocal benefits: restoration can be done more efficiently and at larger scales when interventions occur across linked habitats, and marine spatial plans can catalyze broader outcomes when degraded areas are restored to their full potential for ecosystem service delivery. Restoration aims to result in healthier ecosystems, greater delivery of ecosystem services, more ‘usable’ space for both humans and nature, and enhanced values—potentially diminishing conflicts and improving well-being in coastal communities.
format Article
id doaj-art-c3f14d65951847f0bfac635b5cc40955
institution DOAJ
issn 3004-9784
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Springer
record_format Article
series Discover Conservation
spelling doaj-art-c3f14d65951847f0bfac635b5cc409552025-08-20T03:22:48ZengSpringerDiscover Conservation3004-97842025-06-012111410.1007/s44353-025-00039-xCharting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planningTundi Agardy0Boze Hancock1Anne Birch2Elizabeth McLeod3Sound SeasThe Nature Conservancy, Global Oceans TeamThe Nature ConservancyThe Nature Conservancy, Global Oceans TeamAbstract The marine management community is missing critical opportunities to incorporate restoration into coastal planning as well as formal marine spatial planning (MSP) initiatives. Not committing to restoration as decisions are made on how to allocate ocean space and resources means that priority areas for restoration are being ignored, and the potential for using management to restore ecosystem services and improve human well-being may not be met. Large scale restoration, widely acknowledged as needed, is much more difficult in the absence of a systematic framework to remove pressures or practice active reconstruction in key ecologically linked habitats. To address this deficit, we highlight how restoration can be brought into MSP processes across eight waypoints: (1) determining if restoration can be added as a goal of existing MSP; (2) scoping the problems to craft the correct restoration solutions in the planning area; (3) committing to reconciling development with conservation; (4) utilizing MSP frameworks for restoration in a constellation of interlinked sites; (5) doing participatory master planning to set priorities for action; (6) planning with long time horizons and adaptation in mind; (7) building the foundation for long-term financing; and (8) coming to scale. We show how linking restoration planning with MSP has reciprocal benefits: restoration can be done more efficiently and at larger scales when interventions occur across linked habitats, and marine spatial plans can catalyze broader outcomes when degraded areas are restored to their full potential for ecosystem service delivery. Restoration aims to result in healthier ecosystems, greater delivery of ecosystem services, more ‘usable’ space for both humans and nature, and enhanced values—potentially diminishing conflicts and improving well-being in coastal communities.https://doi.org/10.1007/s44353-025-00039-x
spellingShingle Tundi Agardy
Boze Hancock
Anne Birch
Elizabeth McLeod
Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
Discover Conservation
title Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
title_full Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
title_fullStr Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
title_full_unstemmed Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
title_short Charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
title_sort charting a course for incorporating restoration in marine planning
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s44353-025-00039-x
work_keys_str_mv AT tundiagardy chartingacourseforincorporatingrestorationinmarineplanning
AT bozehancock chartingacourseforincorporatingrestorationinmarineplanning
AT annebirch chartingacourseforincorporatingrestorationinmarineplanning
AT elizabethmcleod chartingacourseforincorporatingrestorationinmarineplanning