“Seagrass ecosystems are shaped by tightly coupled biological and physical processes that determine their persistence, recovery, and response to environmental change”.
“Seagrass ecosystems are shaped by tightly coupled biological and physical processes that determine their persistence, recovery, and response to environmental change”.
Seagrass meadows are among the most productive and valuable coastal ecosystems, yet they have declined dramatically across much of their range due to eutrophication, physical disturbance, altered hydrodynamics, and cascading ecological feedbacks. As a result, restoration has become a central tool in coastal management. However, restoration success remains highly variable, and many efforts fail to establish self-sustaining meadows.
Over the past two decades, my research has focused on why seagrass restoration succeeds in some contexts and fails in others, and on translating mechanistic understanding of ecological and physical processes into practical, scalable restoration strategies. Rather than treating restoration as a planting problem, this work frames restoration as a diagnostic challenge, where success depends on identifying and overcoming site-specific recruitment bottlenecks.
This theme presents applied research on seagrass restoration outcomes and interventions, integrating insights from seed ecology and hydrodynamics-seagrass interactions to provide an evidence-based framework for designing restoration that works with, rather than against, ecosystem processes.

Seagrass restoration is constrained by interacting biological and physical processes operating across spatial and temporal scales. Key questions guiding this research include:
Addressing these questions requires integrating ecology, hydrodynamics, and geomorphology, rather than treating restoration as a purely biological problem.
Restoration can be implemented using seeds, nursery-raised seedlings, or transplantation of adult shoots, and these approaches differ fundamentally in scalability, cost, and vulnerability to site conditions. Seed-based methods offer the greatest potential for large-scale restoration with minimal donor impacts, but success is often limited by bottlenecks acting on early life stages (e.g., seed availability and maturity, dispersal and retention, predation, burial depth, sediment oxygen conditions, and seedling stability under hydrodynamic exposure). Seedling-based approaches can bypass some early constraints through nursery production and controlled establishment, while adult shoot transplants may perform better where recruitment windows are narrow or physical stress is high, at the expense of higher cost and potential donor impacts. My work uses a process-based framework to diagnose which bottlenecks dominate at a site and to match restoration method choice to local ecological and hydrodynamic constraints.
Key publications:
Restoration is often evaluated by short-term plant survival and cover, yet the long-term value of restoration depends on whether meadows recover the functions and services that motivate restoration in the first place. These include habitat complexity, biodiversity support, food-web recovery, and key ecosystem processes such as benthic metabolism and carbon cycling. My work quantifies how quickly communities recolonise restored meadows and how ecosystem functioning responds during recovery, providing outcome-based benchmarks that complement establishment-focused metrics.
Key publications:
In many systems, seagrass loss triggers coupled physical and ecological feedbacks that prevent natural recovery, including increased turbidity, sediment instability, altered biogeochemistry, and shifts in faunal communities. Hydrodynamic exposure can amplify these processes by increasing sediment resuspension and light limitation, while feedbacks can stabilise degraded states even after initial stressors are reduced.
Restoration therefore often requires breaking negative feedbacks and working within physical limits, rather than simply reintroducing plants. By integrating physical constraints with ecosystem feedbacks, this work helps explain why recovery trajectories diverge among sites, and why some systems exhibit threshold dynamics and regime shifts.
Key publications:
Beyond planting methods, restoration success often depends on modifying local conditions to favour establishment. No single technique resolves restoration failure across all systems. Instead, interventions must be matched to diagnosed bottlenecks.
Evaluated approaches include sediment manipulation and sand capping to improve substrate stability, reduction of hydrodynamic stress to enhance early establishment and survival, nursery-based seed and seedling production to increase propagule availability while minimizing impacts on donor meadows, and adaptive, site-specific planting strategies that align restoration methods with local ecological and physical constraints.
Key publications and applied resources:
Restoration outcomes increasingly depend on interacting stressors that affect physiology, sediment processes, and ecological interactions. Beyond classic drivers such as eutrophication and physical disturbance, emerging pressures, including microplastics and microbiome disruption, may erode resilience and alter carbon cycling even when restoration establishes initial plant cover.
This work examines how stressors interact and propagate through microbial pathways and sediment processes, providing mechanistic insight into why restored or recovering meadows may remain vulnerable to collapse.
Key publications (emerging stressors):
Effective restoration and conservation require robust, scalable monitoring that can quantify baseline condition, track recovery trajectories, and detect early warning signals of decline or failure. Monitoring must also translate across scales, from local intervention plots to landscape-level mosaics, and incorporate biological indicators, habitat mapping, and emerging technologies.
My work contributes to indicator-based assessment (e.g., infauna for conservation management), large-scale monitoring frameworks, spatial modelling of seagrass occurrence, and remote sensing and drone-based mapping for linking habitat use, ecological pressure, and conservation outcomes.
Key publications (monitoring and assessment):
This research combines complementary approaches to ensure mechanistic understanding while maintaining relevance for management:
This work has been carried out in close collaboration with PhD students, postdoctoral researchers, technicians, and international partners. Training early-career scientists in field experimentation, underwater work, and process-based thinking has been a central component of this program.
Although much of the work is based along the Swedish west coast and the Baltic Sea, the mechanisms identified are broadly relevant to temperate and subtropical seagrass systems worldwide.
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Related blog posts, guidelines, and networks are linked throughout to support applied use and further exploration.