TY - JOUR
T1 - Recognising seaweeds:
T2 - addressing gaps in international biodiversity frameworks for global seaweed conservation
AU - Beattie, Shaun
AU - Brodie, Juliet
AU - Nagabhatla, Nidhi
AU - Corrigan, Sophie
AU - Lim, Phaik-Eem
AU - Poong, Sze-wan
AU - Kambey, Cicilia S. B.
AU - Cottier-Cook, Elizabeth
N1 - © Copyright 2025 The Authors, Published by John Wiley & Sons
PY - 2025/4/29
Y1 - 2025/4/29
N2 - As anthropogenic pressures increasingly impact marine ecosystems and the biodiversity they support, governance mechanismsfor international biodiversity conservation have emerged. Seaweed habitats are important repositories for marine biodiversity,and they provide crucial ecosystem services that support both ocean and human health. Despite their ecological significance,seaweeds have been overlooked in global conservation discourse compared to other marine habitats. This study provides a the-matic analysis of 18 international biodiversity frameworks to assess the representation of seaweeds and explores ways to betterintegrate them into policies. Key obstacles preventing full integration include imperfect institutional coordination, inconsistentseaweed-related terminology use, limited representation within biodiversity targets and the absence of legally binding agree-ments with enforcement mechanisms. To address these, the study provides recommendations to improve the integration of sea-weeds into biodiversity frameworks, thereby supporting broader marine ecosystem resilience. Improved seaweed representationand conservation will contribute to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 14 (Life below water).
AB - As anthropogenic pressures increasingly impact marine ecosystems and the biodiversity they support, governance mechanismsfor international biodiversity conservation have emerged. Seaweed habitats are important repositories for marine biodiversity,and they provide crucial ecosystem services that support both ocean and human health. Despite their ecological significance,seaweeds have been overlooked in global conservation discourse compared to other marine habitats. This study provides a the-matic analysis of 18 international biodiversity frameworks to assess the representation of seaweeds and explores ways to betterintegrate them into policies. Key obstacles preventing full integration include imperfect institutional coordination, inconsistentseaweed-related terminology use, limited representation within biodiversity targets and the absence of legally binding agree-ments with enforcement mechanisms. To address these, the study provides recommendations to improve the integration of sea-weeds into biodiversity frameworks, thereby supporting broader marine ecosystem resilience. Improved seaweed representationand conservation will contribute to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 14 (Life below water).
KW - biodiversity
KW - conservation
KW - environmental policy
KW - protection
KW - seaweed
KW - sustainable development
U2 - 10.1002/sd.3497
DO - 10.1002/sd.3497
M3 - Article
SN - 0968-0802
JO - Sustainable Development
JF - Sustainable Development
ER -