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Title Science for the protection of Indonesian coastal ecosystems (SPICE) / edited by Tim C. Jennerjahn, Tim Rixen, Hari Eko Irianto, Joko Samiaji
Published Amsterdam, Netherlands ; Cambridge, MA : Elsevier, [2022]
©2022

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Description 1 online resource (484 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Contents Front Cover -- Science for the Protection of Indonesian Coastal Ecosystems (SPICE) -- Science for the Protection of Indonesian Coastal Ecosystems (SPICE) -- Copyright -- Contents -- Contributors -- Reviewers -- Foreword -- 1 -- Introduction-Science for the Protection of Indonesian Coastal Ecosystems (SPICE) -- 1.1 Rationale -- 1.2 Development and implementation of the research and education program SPICE -- 1.3 Research, education, and outreach activities -- 1.4 Summary and synthesis of SPICE results -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 2 -- Physical environment of the Indonesian Seas with focus on the western region -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The marine circulation -- 2.2.1 The global context -- 2.2.2 The regional circulation -- 2.2.3 Tides -- 2.3 Seasonal variability and long-term changes -- 2.3.1 Seasonality of circulation -- 2.3.2 Seasonality of temperature and salinity -- 2.3.3 Long-term development of sea surface temperature and sea surface salinity -- 2.4 Water residence times -- 2.5 Sources and sinks of freshwater -- 2.6 Remote sensing methods applied in coastal process studies -- 2.6.1 Available satellite data -- 2.6.2 Ocean color and its variation in Indonesian coastal waters -- 2.6.3 Satellite-based studies of phytoplankton and coastal processes -- 2.6.3.1 Distribution of phytoplankton -- 2.6.3.2 Coastal discharge and influence of tidal and monsoon phases -- 2.6.3.3 Climatological aspects -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 3 -- Human interventions in rivers and estuaries of Java and Sumatra -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Drivers of environmental change affecting river fluxes -- 3.3 Natural factors, human interventions, and extreme events controlling river fluxes -- 3.3.1 The Brantas River, Java, as an example of high suspended matter rivers -- 3.3.1.1 Variations in sources, composition, and fate of nutrients
3.3.1.2 Variations in sources, composition, and fate of suspended sediments and particulate organic matter -- 3.3.1.3 Effects on phytoplankton abundance and community composition -- 3.3.1.4 Effects on the dissolved oxygen regime of the lower Brantas -- 3.3.2 The Siak River, Sumatra, as an example of blackwater rivers -- 3.3.2.1 Variations in dissolved organic carbon and dissolved oxygen -- 3.3.2.2 Sources and fate of nutrients -- 3.4 Governance and management programs -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 4 -- Carbon cycle in tropical peatlands and coastal seas -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Background information -- 4.2.1 Peat -- 4.2.2 Peatland types -- 4.2.3 Vegetation and biodiversity -- 4.2.4 Peatland distribution and carbon storage -- 4.3 Indonesian peatlands -- 4.3.1 History of Indonesian peat swamps -- 4.3.2 Peat properties -- 4.3.3 Peat carbon accumulation -- 4.3.4 Land use and cover changes in Indonesia -- 4.3.5 The hydrological cycle of Indonesian peatlands -- 4.4 Peat carbon losses -- 4.4.1 CO2 emissions caused by peat and forest fires -- 4.4.2 CO2 emissions caused by peat soil oxidations -- 4.4.3 Off-site CO2 emission -- 4.5 Land-ocean continuum -- 4.5.1 SPICE study area -- 4.5.2 Dissolved organic carbon -- 4.5.3 Dissolved organic carbon yields -- 4.5.4 CO2 emission from rivers -- 4.5.5 Dissolved inorganic carbon yields -- 4.5.6 Leaching and erosion -- 4.5.7 Priming -- 4.6 Estuaries and the ocean -- 4.6.1 Dissolved organic carbon -- 4.6.1.1 The microbial organic carbon pump in the ocean -- 4.6.1.2 Dissolved organic carbon discharges into the ocean -- 4.6.1.3 The fate of dissolved organic carbon in the ocean -- 4.6.2 CO2 emissions from the coastal ocean -- 4.6.3 Organic carbon burial -- 4.6.4 The invisible carbon footprint -- 4.6.5 The marine peat carbon budget -- 4.6.6 Emission factors -- 4.7 Ecosystem CO2 emissions
4.7.1 Net on-site ecosystem CO2 exchange -- 4.7.2 CO2 emission from pristine peat swamps -- 4.7.3 CO2 emission from disturbed peatlands -- 4.8 Evaluation of CO2 emissions -- 4.8.1 Climate response to cumulative emissions of CO2 -- 4.8.2 CO2 reduction potential -- 4.8.3 CO2 emissions and land losses -- 4.8.4 Climate pledges and gaps -- 4.9 Socioeconomic implications -- 4.9.1 REDD+ -- 4.9.2 SPICE field experiments -- 4.10 Outlook -- References -- 5 -- Coral reef social-ecological systems under pressure in Southern Sulawesi -- 5.1 Introduction-coral reefs in Indonesia and the Spermonde Archipelago -- 5.2 Functioning of coral reefs -- 5.2.1 Water quality and biogeochemical processes -- 5.2.2 Benthic coral reef community dynamics of Spermonde Archipelago -- 5.2.3 Bacterial communities and biofilms -- 5.2.4 Coral reef recruitment processes -- 5.2.5 Coral physiology -- 5.2.6 Relationships between benthic and fish communities -- 5.2.7 Consequences of disturbances for coral reef functioning -- 5.3 Genetic connectivity of reefs in the Coral Triangle region -- 5.3.1 Large-scale connectivity across the Coral Triangle region -- 5.3.2 Small-scale connectivity in the Spermonde Archipelago -- 5.3.3 Self-recruitment at the islands of Barrang Lompo and Samalona -- 5.3.4 Application of connectivity data in marine-protected area network design -- 5.4 Social systems associated with the use of coral-based resources and reef-specific challenges -- 5.4.1 Participatory assessment of Spermonde's coral reef fisheries -- 5.4.2 Investigating marine social-ecological feedbacks and dynamics -- 5.4.3 Reef-related livelihoods and implications for the present and future health of fishers and reefs -- 5.4.4 Changing target species, perceptions of reef resources, and implications for food security
5.4.5 Conclusions for the management of coral reef resources in the Spermonde Archipelago -- 5.5 Modeling to support the management of reef systems -- 5.5.1 Simulating the impact of fisheries on coral reef dynamics -- 5.5.2 A model on gear choices of fishermen -- 5.5.3 Spatial patterns of fishing ground distribution -- 5.6 Summary and outlook -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Appendix A5 -- 6 -- Ecology of seagrass beds in Sulawesi-Multifunctional key habitats at the risk of destruction -- 6.1 General introduction to tropical Southeast Asian seagrass meadows -- 6.1.1 High biodiversity of seagrasses in the coral triangle of the tropical Indo-West Pacific -- 6.1.2 Introduction to the Spermonde Archipelago and its seagrasses and mangroves -- 6.2 The current distribution of seagrasses in the Spermonde Archipelago -- 6.2.1 Area estimates and seagrass mapping -- 6.2.2 The structure of tropical seagrass bed systems -- 6.3 Seagrass ecology -- 6.3.1 The historic loss of megaherbivores and today's important role of burrowing shrimp -- 6.3.2 Macrobenthic communities -- 6.3.3 The food web and the trophic pyramid in tropical seagrass beds -- 6.3.4 The function of seagrass meadows as water filters and buffers for land runoff -- 6.3.5 Carbon storage -- 6.3.6 Seagrass beds as carbon sinks -- 6.3.7 Trophic transfers from seagrass meadows to nearby ecosystems -- 6.4 Tropical seagrass beds as key habitat for fish species -- 6.4.1 Tropical seagrasses and their associated fish communities -- 6.4.2 The seagrass canopy as a driver of fish communities -- 6.4.3 Differences in fish habitat utilization across seagrass meadows with distinct canopy structures -- 6.5 Human-seagrass interactions -- 6.5.1 Ecological value and ecosystem services -- 6.5.2 Fisheries on fish and invertebrates in seagrass beds -- 6.5.3 Seaweed farms -- 6.5.4 Human-made infrastructure
6.5.5 Current threats -- 6.6 Conclusions and outlook -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 7 -- Mangrove ecosystems under threat in Indonesia: the Segara Anakan Lagoon, Java, and other examples -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 The study areas -- 7.3 Environmental setting and natural resource use -- 7.3.1 The physical setting -- 7.3.2 Water quality, biogeochemistry, and pollution -- 7.3.3 Carbon sources and storage -- 7.3.4 Flora and fauna -- 7.3.5 Population and natural resource use in the Segara Anakan region -- 7.4 Environmental change in the Segara Anakan Lagoon region: causes, drivers, and impacts -- 7.4.1 Decline of marine species and fisheries -- 7.4.2 Sedimentation and its causes -- 7.4.3 Reclamation of land and conflicts over new land -- 7.5 Threats to mangrove forests and their ecosystem services in Indonesia -- 7.6 Management programs -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 8 -- Impact of megacities on the pollution of coastal areas-the case example Jakarta Bay -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Hydrological system and nutrient dispersion -- 8.3 Organic and inorganic pollution in Jakarta Bay -- 8.3.1 Types, quantity, and distribution of pollutants -- 8.3.1.1 Trace hazardous elements -- 8.3.1.2 Organic pollutants -- 8.3.2 Characterizing emission sources -- 8.3.2.1 Source apportionment of trace elements -- 8.3.2.2 The insect repellent N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide as tracer for municipal sewage and the implications for coastal management -- 8.3.3 Industrial emissions in the Greater Jakarta area and their role for the contamination of the Jakarta Bay ecosystem -- 8.3.4 The flushing-out phenomenon -- 8.3.5 Accumulation in biota -- 8.4 Water quality and biological responses -- 8.4.1 Water pollution in Jakarta Bay and the Thousand Islands -- 8.4.2 Biological responses to anthropogenic stressors -- 8.4.3 Impacts on the physiology of key coral reef organisms
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 1, 2021)
Subject Coastal zone management -- Indonesia
Coastal ecology -- Indonesia
Marine ecology -- Indonesia
Coastal ecology
Coastal zone management
Marine ecology
Indonesia
Form Electronic book
Author Jennerjahn, Tim C., editor
Rixen, Tim., editor
Irianto, Hari Eko, editor
Samiaji, Joko, editor
ISBN 9780128150511
0128150513