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Coral reef restoration in Indonesia: A review of policies and projects

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Coral reef restoration in Indonesia: A review of policies and projects . / Razak, T.B.; Boström-Einarsson, L.; Alisa, C.A.G. et al.
In: Marine Policy, Vol. 137, 104940, 31.03.2022.

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Razak TB, Boström-Einarsson L, Alisa CAG, Vida RT, Lamont TAC. Coral reef restoration in Indonesia: A review of policies and projects . Marine Policy. 2022 Mar 31;137:104940. Epub 2022 Jan 4. doi: 10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104940

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Razak, T.B. ; Boström-Einarsson, L. ; Alisa, C.A.G. et al. / Coral reef restoration in Indonesia : A review of policies and projects . In: Marine Policy. 2022 ; Vol. 137.

Bibtex

@article{1a03cda5c719447ea26590241548be31,
title = "Coral reef restoration in Indonesia: A review of policies and projects ",
abstract = "Indonesia's coral reefs have been severely damaged by global and local stressors, and a range of active restoration techniques are now being used in attempts to rebuild degraded reefs. However, it is difficult to summarise Indonesia's restoration efforts as a whole due to a lack of consistent reporting. Here, we first discuss Indonesia's legal policy framework concerning reef restoration; this is included in the agenda of two government ministries (Marine Affairs and Fisheries, and Environment and Forestry), and comprises national laws and governmental, presidential and ministerial regulations. We then provide an extensive review of reef restoration projects in Indonesia, documenting 533 records across the country between 1990 and 2020. Most (73%) of these records come from the past ten years, and many (42%) are reported in online news articles rather than scientific reports or papers. This review identified 120,483 units of artificial reef installed across Indonesia, along with 53,640 units of coral transplantation (including both coral nurseries and direct out-planting onto reefs); in total, 965,992 fragments of hard coral have been planted across Indonesia. The most favoured restoration materials are concrete (46%) and steel structures (24%). Projects are organised by a diverse range of governmental, NGO, private and community-led organisations. This review demonstrates that Indonesia's policy has encouraged a diverse range of practitioners to implement reef restoration, but projects are often not coordinated with wider networks of restoration practitioners or scientists, and only 16% of the identified projects included a post-installation monitoring framework. Incorporating clear objectives and long-term monitoring programmes in project planning stages, while prioritising knowledge exchange and engagement with international scientific community, will substantially improve restoration outcomes in Indonesia. This will allow the country to fulfil its considerable potential as a global leader in rebuilding damaged coral reefs. ",
keywords = "Coral reef, Indonesia, Regulations, Rehabilitation, Restoration",
author = "T.B. Razak and L. Bostr{\"o}m-Einarsson and C.A.G. Alisa and R.T. Vida and T.A.C. Lamont",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104940",
language = "English",
volume = "137",
journal = "Marine Policy",
issn = "0308-597X",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Coral reef restoration in Indonesia

T2 - A review of policies and projects

AU - Razak, T.B.

AU - Boström-Einarsson, L.

AU - Alisa, C.A.G.

AU - Vida, R.T.

AU - Lamont, T.A.C.

PY - 2022/3/31

Y1 - 2022/3/31

N2 - Indonesia's coral reefs have been severely damaged by global and local stressors, and a range of active restoration techniques are now being used in attempts to rebuild degraded reefs. However, it is difficult to summarise Indonesia's restoration efforts as a whole due to a lack of consistent reporting. Here, we first discuss Indonesia's legal policy framework concerning reef restoration; this is included in the agenda of two government ministries (Marine Affairs and Fisheries, and Environment and Forestry), and comprises national laws and governmental, presidential and ministerial regulations. We then provide an extensive review of reef restoration projects in Indonesia, documenting 533 records across the country between 1990 and 2020. Most (73%) of these records come from the past ten years, and many (42%) are reported in online news articles rather than scientific reports or papers. This review identified 120,483 units of artificial reef installed across Indonesia, along with 53,640 units of coral transplantation (including both coral nurseries and direct out-planting onto reefs); in total, 965,992 fragments of hard coral have been planted across Indonesia. The most favoured restoration materials are concrete (46%) and steel structures (24%). Projects are organised by a diverse range of governmental, NGO, private and community-led organisations. This review demonstrates that Indonesia's policy has encouraged a diverse range of practitioners to implement reef restoration, but projects are often not coordinated with wider networks of restoration practitioners or scientists, and only 16% of the identified projects included a post-installation monitoring framework. Incorporating clear objectives and long-term monitoring programmes in project planning stages, while prioritising knowledge exchange and engagement with international scientific community, will substantially improve restoration outcomes in Indonesia. This will allow the country to fulfil its considerable potential as a global leader in rebuilding damaged coral reefs.

AB - Indonesia's coral reefs have been severely damaged by global and local stressors, and a range of active restoration techniques are now being used in attempts to rebuild degraded reefs. However, it is difficult to summarise Indonesia's restoration efforts as a whole due to a lack of consistent reporting. Here, we first discuss Indonesia's legal policy framework concerning reef restoration; this is included in the agenda of two government ministries (Marine Affairs and Fisheries, and Environment and Forestry), and comprises national laws and governmental, presidential and ministerial regulations. We then provide an extensive review of reef restoration projects in Indonesia, documenting 533 records across the country between 1990 and 2020. Most (73%) of these records come from the past ten years, and many (42%) are reported in online news articles rather than scientific reports or papers. This review identified 120,483 units of artificial reef installed across Indonesia, along with 53,640 units of coral transplantation (including both coral nurseries and direct out-planting onto reefs); in total, 965,992 fragments of hard coral have been planted across Indonesia. The most favoured restoration materials are concrete (46%) and steel structures (24%). Projects are organised by a diverse range of governmental, NGO, private and community-led organisations. This review demonstrates that Indonesia's policy has encouraged a diverse range of practitioners to implement reef restoration, but projects are often not coordinated with wider networks of restoration practitioners or scientists, and only 16% of the identified projects included a post-installation monitoring framework. Incorporating clear objectives and long-term monitoring programmes in project planning stages, while prioritising knowledge exchange and engagement with international scientific community, will substantially improve restoration outcomes in Indonesia. This will allow the country to fulfil its considerable potential as a global leader in rebuilding damaged coral reefs.

KW - Coral reef

KW - Indonesia

KW - Regulations

KW - Rehabilitation

KW - Restoration

U2 - 10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104940

DO - 10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104940

M3 - Journal article

VL - 137

JO - Marine Policy

JF - Marine Policy

SN - 0308-597X

M1 - 104940

ER -