Records reveal the vast historical extent of European oyster reef ecosystems

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Thurstan, Ruth | Mccormick, Hannah | Preston, Joanne | Ashton, Elizabeth | Bennema, Floris | Cetinić, Ana Bratoš | Brown, Janet | Cameron, Tom | da Costa, Fiz | Donnan, David | Ewers, Christine | Fortibuoni, Tomaso | Galimany, Eve | Giovanardi, Otello | Grancher, Romain | Grech, Daniele | Hayden-Hughes, Maria | Helmer, Luke | Jensen, K. Thomas | Juanes, José | Latchford, Janie | Moore, Alec | Moutopoulos, Dimitrios | Nielsen, Pernille | von Nordheim, Henning | Ondiviela, Bárbara | Peter, Corina | Pogoda, Bernadette | Poulsen, Bo | Pouvreau, Stéphane | Roberts, Callum | Scherer, Cordula | Smaal, Aad | Smyth, David | Strand, Åsa | Theodorou, John | zu Ermgassen, Philine

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Nature -

International audience. Anthropogenic activities have impacted marine ecosystems at extraordinary scales. Biogenic reef ecosystems built by the European flat oyster ( Ostrea edulis ) typically declined before scientific monitoring. The past form and extent of these habitats thus remains unknown, with such information potentially providing valuable perspectives for current management and policy. Collating >1,600 records published over 350 years, we created a map of historical oyster reef presence at the resolution of 10 km 2 across its biogeographic range, including documenting abundant reef habitats along the coasts of France, Denmark, Ireland and the United Kingdom. Spatial extent data were available from just 26% of locations yet totalled >1.7 million hectares (median reef size = 29.9 ha, range 0.01–1,536,000 ha), with 190 associated macrofauna species from 13 phyla described. Our analysis demonstrates that oyster reefs were once a dominant three-dimensional feature of European coastlines, with their loss pointing to a fundamental restructuring and ‘flattening’ of coastal and shallow-shelf seafloors. This unique empirical record demonstrates the highly degraded nature of European seas and provides key baseline context for international restoration commitments.

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