Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves

Indonesia, the most mangrove-rich nation in the world, has proposed the most globally ambitious mangrove rehabilitation target (600,000 ha) of any nation, to be achieved by 2024 to support multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 1–3, 6, 13 and 14). Yet, mangrove restoration and rehabilitation ac...

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Autores principales: Sasmito, S.D., Basyuni, M., Kridalaksana, A., Saragi-Sasmito, M.F., Lovelock, C.E., Murdiyarso, D.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131075
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author Sasmito, S.D.
Basyuni, M.
Kridalaksana, A.
Saragi-Sasmito, M.F.
Lovelock, C.E.
Murdiyarso, D.
author_browse Basyuni, M.
Kridalaksana, A.
Lovelock, C.E.
Murdiyarso, D.
Saragi-Sasmito, M.F.
Sasmito, S.D.
author_facet Sasmito, S.D.
Basyuni, M.
Kridalaksana, A.
Saragi-Sasmito, M.F.
Lovelock, C.E.
Murdiyarso, D.
author_sort Sasmito, S.D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Indonesia, the most mangrove-rich nation in the world, has proposed the most globally ambitious mangrove rehabilitation target (600,000 ha) of any nation, to be achieved by 2024 to support multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 1–3, 6, 13 and 14). Yet, mangrove restoration and rehabilitation across the world have often suffered low success rates and been applied at small scales. Here, we identify 193,367 ha (estimated costs at US$0.29–1.74 billion) that have the potential to align with the national mangrove rehabilitation programme. Despite being only 30% of the national target, our robust assessment considered biogeomorphology, 20 years of land-use and land-cover change and state forest land status, all key factors moderating mangrove restoration success which have often been neglected in Indonesia. Increasing subnational government representation in mangrove governance as well as improving monitoring and evaluation will increase the likelihood of achieving the mangrove rehabilitation targets and reduce risks of failure. Rehabilitating and conserving mangroves in Indonesia could benefit 74 million coastal people and can potentially contribute to the national land-sector emissions reduction of up to 16%.
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spelling CGSpace1310752023-12-08T19:36:04Z Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves Sasmito, S.D. Basyuni, M. Kridalaksana, A. Saragi-Sasmito, M.F. Lovelock, C.E. Murdiyarso, D. mangroves sustainable development ecological restoration Indonesia, the most mangrove-rich nation in the world, has proposed the most globally ambitious mangrove rehabilitation target (600,000 ha) of any nation, to be achieved by 2024 to support multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 1–3, 6, 13 and 14). Yet, mangrove restoration and rehabilitation across the world have often suffered low success rates and been applied at small scales. Here, we identify 193,367 ha (estimated costs at US$0.29–1.74 billion) that have the potential to align with the national mangrove rehabilitation programme. Despite being only 30% of the national target, our robust assessment considered biogeomorphology, 20 years of land-use and land-cover change and state forest land status, all key factors moderating mangrove restoration success which have often been neglected in Indonesia. Increasing subnational government representation in mangrove governance as well as improving monitoring and evaluation will increase the likelihood of achieving the mangrove rehabilitation targets and reduce risks of failure. Rehabilitating and conserving mangroves in Indonesia could benefit 74 million coastal people and can potentially contribute to the national land-sector emissions reduction of up to 16%. 2023-01-02 2023-07-11T08:08:53Z 2023-07-11T08:08:53Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131075 en Open Access Springer Sasmito, S., Basyuni, M., Kridalaksana, A., Saragi-Sasmito, M., Lovelock, C., & Murdiyarso, D. (2023). Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 7(1), 62-70. doi: 10.1038/s41559-022-01926-5
spellingShingle mangroves
sustainable development
ecological restoration
Sasmito, S.D.
Basyuni, M.
Kridalaksana, A.
Saragi-Sasmito, M.F.
Lovelock, C.E.
Murdiyarso, D.
Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title_full Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title_fullStr Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title_full_unstemmed Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title_short Challenges and opportunities for achieving Sustainable Development Goals through restoration of Indonesia’s mangroves
title_sort challenges and opportunities for achieving sustainable development goals through restoration of indonesia s mangroves
topic mangroves
sustainable development
ecological restoration
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131075
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