Forests

Mangrove restoration potential: Mapping tool

There is incredible potential for many of the world's mangroves to be restored to functioning habitat. But where are they? How do we decide where to focus our efforts, and what can be done to maximise our chances of success? With the help of a new interactive map tool, the potential for restoring more than 800,000 hectares of mangroves just may be possible.
mangrove backlit with water in back

Recognising this enormous potential of mangrove restoration, experts at the University of Cambridge, The Nature Conservancy and IUCN merged innovative data to create a unique mapping tool to allow decision-makers to identify areas where mangrove forest restoration can succeed by highlighting places where they once thrived, and where conditions remain suitable for restoration.

words about mangrove tool over a photo of young mangroves Photo: D. Wodehouse Take a tour of the tool

For all of the areas that show promise, this new mapping tool can inspire hope that we may be able to restore mangrove forests in selected areas. The major factors influencing mangrove restoration which are incorporated into the tool include: tidal range; recent sea level rise; projected future sea level rise; recent changes in sediments; time since loss; average size of loss patches; and the proximity of loss areas to remaining mangroves. Using these factors, the expert advisory group also developed a restoration potential score which gives an indication of the potential for restoration in different settings. More than that, the tool calculates what people can actually gain from restoration in a particular area.

As much as 812,000 hectares of lost or degraded mangrove areas show potential for restoration, with over half a million hectares of these considered highly restorable. These figures are truly global as the areas identified for restorable span 106 countries and territories.

Other areas are less likely candidates for successful mangrove restoration because of factors like profound erosion, or that they have subsided, become fully inundated by the sea, or are located in places that have been converted into buildings and grey infrastructure. These areas are excluded from the models of restoration potential.

The greatest potential for restoration is perhaps found within the approximately 138,000 hectares of identified degraded mangroves – where there it is believed that full recovery can be expected to bring further benefits with relatively little investment.

The potential to restore mangroves on coastlines, in deltas and wetlands, and along waterways across the world is there. See for yourself at: maps.oceanwealth.org/mangrove-restoration/


The Mangrove Restoration Potential Map is funded by the International Climate Initiative (IKI) of the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMU), Germany.

For more information, please contact:

Elmedina Krilasevic @ Elmedina.Krilasevic@iucn.org

Dorothée Herr @ Dorothee.Herr@iucn.org

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