Abstract
There is substantial, growing literature that details positive human health effects, psychological and physiological, of exposure to “nature,” including “green” and “blue space,” with evidence suggesting that diversity of species or environments may have specific positive human health benefits. These health benefits are important ecosystem services provided by healthy ecosystems. In this paper, we discuss several critical ecosystem services provided by wetlands including disaster risk reduction, with an emphasis on benefits to human health and well-being. Impacts to human health via damage to ecosystem services from disasters have rarely been considered in disaster planning or mitigation, nor have the health benefits been part of the framework for planning urban greenspaces and land-use. Coastal wetlands can be part of “natural and nature-based” solutions, minimizing the impacts of disasters by buffering coastal communities from storms and erosion and absorbing flood waters. In addition, mental and physical health benefits of experiencing healthy wetlands could offset some stress and disease encounters related to disasters. Thus, coastal wetlands should be part of a strategy for reducing the risk posed by disasters and facilitating recovery. We conclude with recommendations for research priorities and specific inclusion of wetlands in coastal community planning for disaster response and recovery.
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Introduction
It is now well established that exposure to “green” spaces of many kinds (e.g., parks and protected areas that are more natural and biodiverse) and that include water or coasts (“blue”) provides a broad suite of mental, physical, and social health benefits to people of all ages, gender, ethnicities, and socio-economic status (e.g., see Jiang et al. 2014; Sandifer et al. 2015; Jiang et al. 2016; White et al. 2016; Cox et al. 2017; Frumkin et al. 2017; Van den Berg 2017; White et al. 2017). There are several theories about how nature experiences produce health benefits, such as encouraging physical activity (Bauman et al. 1999; Depledge and Bird 2009; Barton and Pretty 2010), promoting attention restoration (Kaplan 1995) and reducing stress and anxiety (Ulrich et al. 1991). However, much work remains to be done to identify and understand mechanisms of action, causality, dose-response characteristics, and other factors (Sandifer et al. 2015; Frumkin et al. 2017). Nonetheless, available information is sufficiently robust that a growing number of medical practitioners is already prescribing nature exposure (green space, parks, coasts) for certain patients (Poulsen et al. 2015; Wessel 2017; Zarr et al. 2017), although this trend is still in relative infancy (Haubenhofer et al. 2010; Van den Berg 2017).
Linking Nature Exposure, Ecosystem Services, Biodiversity, and Human Health
Because most, if not all, ecosystem services are important to human health and well-being (MEA 2005), Sandifer and Sutton-Grier (2014) characterized human health as the “cumulative or ultimate” ecosystem service (see also Frumkin et al. 2017). Healthy ecosystems provide high quality ecosystem services while stressed ecosystems produce degraded services that may cause negative psychological and physical health effects (Sandifer and Sutton-Grier 2014; Sandifer et al. 2015). With the exception of hydraulic head, mechanical filtration, and a few others, most ecosystem services are, to one degree or another, supported by biodiversity (Palumbi et al. 2009). Biodiversity-supported ecosystem services that support human well-being can be lumped into a variety of categories for ease of consideration, such as improved psychological health; enhanced physiological condition; decreases in some inflammatory-based illnesses and other non-infectious diseases; decreased transmission of certain infectious diseases; aesthetic, cultural, recreational, socio-economic and spiritual benefits; and tangible materials such as food, fiber, and medicines (Sandifer et al. 2015). In addition, exposure to rich microbial biodiversity in managed ecosystems, such as traditional farms and in more rural areas, also has been found to support human immune functioning with several examples of children growing up on farms having lower incidences of conditions such as asthma (Debarry et al. 2007; Ege et al. 2011; Ruokolainen et al. 2017c). From this and other evidence we infer that exposure to biodiversity in both more natural as well as some managed ecosystems, such as traditional farms, can support human immune function and a reduction in disease burden.
Wetland Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity Are Important for Human Health
The biodiversity in coastal and marine ecosystems, including marshes, mangrove forests, and seagrass meadows (Fig. 1), is important for providing ecosystem services humans desire from coastal ecosystems such as fish nursery habitat, water purification, flood risk reduction, climate modulation, nutrient cycling and others (MEA 2005; Mitsch et al. 2015). In addition to these better-known services, coastal wetlands also produce a broad range of cultural ecosystem services which are often ignored or poorly accounted for in ecological analyses. Rodrigues et al. (2017) summarized available literature and recorded the following cultural ecosystem services from salt marshes, mangroves and seagrass meadows: recreation and leisure; aesthetic; spiritual; cultural heritage and identity; educational; inspirational; sense of place; social; scientific; and existence.
According to the Valencia Declaration (Delegates of The World Conference on Marine Biodiversity 2008), “Marine biodiversity underpins the functioning of marine ecosystems and their provision of services - without biodiversity there would be no ecosystem services.” Wetlands, especially tidal marshes and mangroves, are widely considered to be the most, or at least among the most, valuable of our ecosystems in terms of contributions of ecosystem services (Costanza et al. 2014; Mitsch et al. 2015), and their biodiversity provides an essential foundation for the sustained production and delivery of ecosystem services. However, the loss of native biodiversity along our coasts already has resulted in both diminished ecosystem capacity to provide ecosystem services and increased health threats to humans from harmful microbes, extreme weather, chemical contaminants, etc. (Worm et al. 2006). Although our knowledge of how marine biodiversity and ecosystem services are causally linked remains poorly developed (Ricketts et al. 2016), we know that functional diversity is especially important (Diaz et al. 2006) and we have sufficient understanding to support the conservation of biodiversity as an essential element in sustaining critical ecosystem services (Palumbi et al. 2009).
Biodiversity also may play complex roles in the occurrence and transmission of disease. Based on an extensive review of the literature, Sandifer et al. (2015) posited that global biodiversity losses may be contributing to increasing prevalence of a variety of inflammatory-based diseases, such as allergies, asthma, some cardiovascular disease, irritable bowel disease, type 2 diabetes, some obesity, and others. They presented findings from a number of studies that linked development of healthy human gut and skin microbiota to exposure, especially during childhood, to environments with diverse microbiota, and in turn linked healthy human microbiota to better immune function and less inflammatory disease (Lynch et al. 2014; Ruokolainen et al. 2015). More recent studies, such as those by Ruokolainen et al. (2017a, b) provide added support for what has been termed the “biodiversity” or “hygiene” hypothesis. As Ruokolainen et al. (2017b) stated, “Contact with beneficial bacteria, particularly early in life, seems to be instrumental to the normal development of immune response.” In Australia, Liddicoat et al. (2018) found that good respiratory health correlated with landscape biodiversity and suggested possible beneficial immunomodulatory effects from environmental microbiota in diverse areas as a potential mechanism. Wetlands and coasts were included in areas of high biodiversity they recommended should be investigated further. Lasher et al. (2009) studied the bacterial communities in anaerobic marsh soils of Sapelo Island, GA, and found that overall bacterial diversity was similar to that of terrestrial soils but with a unique composition. Interestingly, the marsh bacterial community contained representatives of Firmicutes and Bacteriodetes, two of the bacterial groups to which exposure was negatively associated with allergic reactions in young children (Lynch et al. 2014). Thus, while evidence is yet fragmentary, there is ample reason to develop and test hypotheses that wetland biodiversity, and more specifically wetland microbial biodiversity, may provide health protective benefits for humans, both from infectious and inflammatory-based diseases.
A variety of studies have examined the role of local biodiversity on transmission of infectious diseases that affect humans, generally through effects of species and habitat diversity on the abundance, behavior, or condition of hosts, vectors, or parasites. Some studies have shown a positive effect of biodiversity in reducing disease transmission (e.g., see Young et al. 2014), but overall the evidence is equivocal and may depend on the disease and also the scale at which the relationship is examined. Because there was no clear, generally applicable answer as to whether biodiversity may positively or negatively affect human risk of acquiring infectious disease, Sandifer et al. (2015) suggested that diseases and circumstances should be considered on a more or less case by case basis but recommended continued application of a precautionary approach and strengthening of biodiversity conservation for human well-being benefits. More recently, Ostfeld and Keesing (2017) found strong evidence for an infectious disease protection function of high biodiversity. Potential roles of coastal wetlands and wetland biodiversity in reducing human disease burdens of both infectious and non-infectious etiology deserve additional study.
For wetlands specifically, there is limited but growing evidence that they do help prevent disease transmission, although this function has not been linked specifically to biodiversity but more to wetland presence and area. For example, De Jesus Crespo et al. (2018) (in this issue) found a relationship between the occurrence of dengue and the presence of wetlands in neighborhoods in San Juan Bay Estuary (SJBE), Puerto Rico. Dengue occurrence was lower in neighborhoods with higher wetland cover even after controlling for population density and other socio-economic aspects. Similarly, Skaff and Cheruvelil (2016) reported that incidence of West Nile Virus in humans was lower in US counties with higher average wetland size compared to those with lower wetland size, but apparent wetland effects were also related to the dominant species of mosquito vector and drought status. Lamb et al. (2017) determined that when seagrasses were present there was a 50% reduction in bacterial pathogens capable of causing disease in humans and marine organisms. Corals adjacent to seagrasses showed twofold reductions in disease levels compared to corals at sites without adjacent seagrasses. The researchers designed this study following field work in coral reefs in Indonesia after which everyone who went in the water got amoebic dysentery (Bittel 2017). This led the researchers to return to the site to take water samples where they determined that levels of Enterrococus, a bacteria that can cause vomiting, nausea, and diarrhea, in some areas were much higher than recommended levels but were far lower in the seagrass meadows (Bittel 2017). There may be many more direct, positive health benefits of exposure to coastal wetlands that have not yet been discovered. This is a field of research with a great deal of potential.
There is also new evidence that suggests that exposure to coastal, river, lake and other freshwater ecosystems (termed “blue” space) as well as greenspace, has important mental and physical health and well-being benefits for humans (Nichols 2014). This research into the health benefits of water exposure has several descriptors including “BlueHealth” (Grellier et al. 2017), the “Blue Gym” (Depledge and Bird 2009; White et al. 2010, 2016), and simply “blue space”. Water features typically attract a lot of people and promote physical activity such as running or walking along the shore of a lake or along a beach (Volker et al. 2016). In addition, water is an important part of restorative experiences and helps people feel a stronger connection with a place (Volker et al. 2016), ocean views provide people with greater peace of mind (Peng et al. 2016), and those who live nearer the coast tend to be healthier (Wheeler et al. 2012), all of which suggest that there are many health benefits of coastal environments, including benefits for psychological well-being. However, more research on the mechanisms by which water exposure has these beneficial health outcomes is greatly needed, as well as more consistent ways to measure the long-term health benefits of “blue” contacts (Gascon et al. 2015). Despite the limitations in data, however, several studies provide evidence for measurable health benefits, particularly for mental health, of water exposure including coastal environments.
Potential to Leverage Health Benefits of Wetlands in Disaster Planning, Response, and Recovery
Disasters affecting coastal areas typically include major storms, such as hurricanes, extreme precipitation events that result in wide-spread flooding, droughts, post-earthquake tsunamis, as well as man-made or exacerbated technological and natural disasters such as the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and recent wildfires in California. These events are very damaging to coastal communities and can have long-term impacts on communities, economies and human health and well-being, including mental and physical health and stress levels (IOM (Institute of Medicine) 2007; Palinkas 2012; Leaning and Guha-Sapir 2013; Adkins 2015; Shultz et al. 2015; Laffon et al. 2016; Sandifer et al. 2017). During 2017 alone, the US experienced 16 separate weather and climate-associated disasters, including hurricanes, severe storms, a freeze, drought, and wildfires, each of which caused damages in excess of $1 billion with a total cost of over $300B, the highest annual total on record (NOAA 2017). Better means of preparing for, coping with, and recovering from such traumatic but all too frequently occurring “extreme events” is a significant need here and elsewhere around the world.
One approach to improve the protection and resiliency of coastal communities is use of natural or “green” infrastructure or combinations of natural and built (“green” + “gray”) infrastructure (Sutton-Grier et al. 2015, 2018). In this regard, there is growing scientific evidence that wetlands and other coastal ecosystems can play significant roles in storm, flood and erosion risk reduction for coastal communities (Tanaka et al. 2007; Gedan et al. 2011; Shepard et al. 2011; Arkema et al. 2013; Bouma et al. 2014; Ferrario et al. 2014; Möller et al. 2014; Narayan et al. 2016) and conservation of biodiversity (Scholte et al. 2016). Coastal ecosystems, particularly mangroves, salt marsh and coral reefs, help reduce wave heights, capture water and sediment, and assist in shoreline stabilization, reducing the level of flooding and damages, thereby delivering important protection for vulnerable coastal communities (Sutton-Grier et al. 2015 and references therein). These risk reduction benefits have substantial economic value for coastal communities. For example, Narayan et al. (2017) determined that coastal wetlands avoided $625 million in direct flood damages during Hurricane Sandy.
Perhaps of equal importance is a role that wetlands and other natural coastal ecosystems may play in providing direct mental and physical health benefits to those impacted by disasters. People are often stressed for weeks to months or longer post-disaster because their livelihoods have been upended and they are concerned about how disasters will impact their families, neighborhoods, incomes, and future economic prospects (e.g., see Sandifer et al. 2017 and references therein). Although, to our knowledge, there has been relatively little research into the potentially significant roles that green and blue space can play in disaster recovery, there is evidence to suggest that contact with nature might be an effective way to reduce health problems, including stress, post-disaster. For example, exposure to natural and biodiverse areas reduces both mental and physical stress symptoms, supports attention restoration, and improves cognition (Sandifer et al. 2015). Thus, it may be possible to help alleviate mental and physical stress after a disaster by providing opportunities for at-risk individuals to experience increased exposure to healthy natural and biodiverse environments, including saltmarshes and other wetlands (e.g., Poulsen et al. 2015; Wessel 2017; Zarr et al. 2017 and the National Park Service’s Park Rx program [www. Parkrx.org] about prescriptions for nature contact). Coastal and other environments that provide opportunities for wildlife viewing have been identified as having some health promoting effects (de Bell et al. 2017; White et al. 2017), especially where “charismatic” fauna such as birds, butterflies, and flowering plants (e.g., Fuller et al. 2007; McGinlay et al. 2017; White et al. 2017) can be viewed. Also, a variety of nature-assisted therapies have been and are being tried to treat post-traumatic stress disorders and other stress-related mental illness (e.g., Poulsen et al. 2015; Pálsdóttir et al. 2018). Salt marshes, mangroves, and freshwater wetlands can provide wonderful and peaceful opportunities for restoration and reflection and also regular opportunities for encounters with birds and other interesting wildlife.
To be clear, we are not suggesting that disaster managers, and in particular first responders, should change their focus from providing immediate help and care for people who are struggling to find safety, food, shelter, and medical care. But for longer-term recovery from major storms or oil spills, which often takes months to years, it could be useful for disaster response efforts to incorporate access to healthy coastal ecosystems to support mental restoration and reduce anxiety and stress among disaster victims. And in the pre-disaster planning phase, it would be useful to consider the roles that healthy coastal wetlands and other ecosystems play in promoting community resilience and human health. These benefits are often overlooked or given little attention in disaster planning and response. We hope that this Commentary will reach a broad audience, including experts in disaster response as well as scientists, so that more people will consider the multiple benefits coastal wetlands provide and routinely incorporate them in efforts to increase coastal community resilience.
One way that coastal communities might include wetlands and other coastal ecosystems in resilience and disaster planning activities could be via appending a “nature-based solutions” section to emergency preparedness plans. Such an addendum could encompass contributions coastal wetlands and their functions can make to disaster preparation, response, and recovery including but not limited to: (1) storm protection, wave attenuation, and sediment control; (2) trapping, filtration, and sequestration for carbon, nutrients, a variety of pollutants, and infectious disease-causing microorganisms); (3) water capture, management, supply, flow and flood control; and (4) trauma recovery and alleviation of stress and anxiety for people affected by a specific disaster. Incorporating coastal wetland functions broadly into coastal planning could occur at the national and state levels but might be most effective at county and municipal levels where both disaster impacts and response effects are greatest.
The roles of natural and restored wetlands in support of human health and well-being could also be incorporated into ongoing coastal resilience and restoration activities of the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). USACE does a substantial amount of wetland restoration work and is starting to include more natural and nature-based (NNBF) features in their coastal resilience projects (Bridges et al. 2015). In addition, USACE is leading an effort to develop additional guidance for when and how to use NNBF features; this guidance includes the ecosystem services provided by NNBF and we suggest it should include a discussion of health benefits as well.
Another important reason for highlighting the myriad roles of natural and restored coastal wetlands to protection of human life and property in emergency plans and by emergency management officials is that such inclusion would likely increase the visibility of these wetland functions among the public, with consequent increases in public support for conservation and restoration of wetlands and their biodiversity. Raising awareness could lead to additional partners helping to fund and support coastal protection and restoration projects for coastal resilience.
Conclusions
There is potential to improve the resilience of coastal communities to major disasters by incorporating into disaster planning and response efforts more natural landscapes and protecting, restoring, and creating green and blue spaces. It should go without saying that this investment in natural infrastructure should be in conjunction with building and maintaining other critical infrastructure such as roads and bridges. Since the funding for natural infrastructure projects such as wetland restoration often comes from different sources than the funding for other critical infrastructure, these do not have to be in competition but instead could work together to increase the resilience of coastal communities and ecosystems. Using this approach, coastal communities can both reduce the impacts of disasters and help people recover from the stress and some other health impacts associated with catastrophes.
It is also important to note that, despite a significant accumulation of evidence on disaster reduction and health benefits of green, blue and biodiverse spaces, there are still many more questions remaining for which we need additional research and evidence-based answers. This makes it challenging to help communities and cities incorporate more green and blue spaces into their design and growth because we do not know yet exactly which characteristics of green and blue spaces elicit human health benefits (Flies et al. 2017). Some of these research needs we have highlighted already (Sandifer et al. 2015), and there have also been other efforts to specify research priorities (Flies et al. 2017; Frumkin et al. 2017). Frumkin et al. (2017) laid out seven domains of nature-health research that need further attention, including better understanding of the psychological and physiological mechanisms by which nature improves human health, determining how best to measure “nature contact” and doses, identifying which elements of nature exposure matter, and incorporating roles of human diversity and equity issues with regard to access to nature. We agree with their recommendations and suggest that in addition, these research domains should be expanded to include blue spaces, particularly coastal environments and their wetlands. Further, publicizing their importance for human health promotion and disaster impact reduction could help generate strong, additional public support for biodiversity and wetland conservation and restoration activities. Based on observations here, our previous research, and the comprehensive lists in Frumkin et al. (2017), some of the research questions or topics we think are most important to tackle include:
- 1.
How do coastal wetlands and their biodiversity support ecosystem services that promote human health and well-being and what are the mechanisms by which this health enhancement occurs?
- 2.
Do greenspace prescriptions provide quantifiable health benefits for people, especially children?
- 3.
How does biodiversity produce psychological and physiological human health benefits? What physiological and psychological mechanisms are involved and how do they operate to produce positive health effects?
- 4.
Is it feasible to use biodiversity metrics as proxies to identify and quantify certain health effects of nature exposure?
- 5.
Can we measure the potential immunomodulatory effects of differing levels and kinds of environmental microbiota, in particular those associated with wetlands?
- 6.
What characteristics of “blue spaces” (water) are associated with health benefits and how might these benefits occur? How may biodiversity of coastal and freshwater wetlands support the production and delivery of health benefits? What roles may charismatic and easily observable marine fauna such as marine mammals, sea turtles, sea birds, seals, sea lions, etc. play? Can underwater biodiversity that generally cannot be observed except in aquaria or clear tropical waters also have an effect?
- 7.
Do salt marsh and mangrove forests provide similar levels of infectious disease risk reduction as those observed in seagrass? Does the effect hold for a range of infectious diseases or is it limited? Does it also hold for other diseases such as asthma, allergies, and other inflammatory-based disorders? Could we use wetland mesocosms to explore some of these questions?
- 8.
Can we quantify disaster effects and costs averted by green and gray + green infrastructure, including how nature exposure can serve to alleviate negative health effects associated with stress?
- 9.
Can we better test hypotheses that nature and biodiversity exposure, including contact with wetlands, can alleviate stress, reduce post-traumatic stress symptoms, increase physical activity, and otherwise improve health?
- 10.
How can we integrate and quantify disaster reduction roles of natural coastal infrastructure in policy and emergency preparedness, response and recovery plans?
As our knowledge of the nature and human health relationship improves, there are numerous promising avenues for how this information can be used to improve ecosystem conservation and human health. Possibilities include: (1) how we can better design cities to ensure that people come into contact with more natural areas daily; (2) how we can plan and reconfigure developed coastal areas to better capitalize on the natural storm impact reduction characteristics of coastal wetlands and other ecosystems while simultaneously leveraging those ecosystems to provide people with restorative experiences to help reduce anxiety, depression, and assist them in recovering from disasters more quickly; and (3) how we can design and conduct ecosystem restoration and protection projects in ways that best conserve biodiversity and provide a diversity of recreational nature exposure experiences for people. Focusing on research to answer some of the most pressing questions, such as those noted above, will equip scientists, urban planners, and policy makers with critical information to enable society to build more sustainable and resilient cities and communities and maintain and protect healthy ecosystems.
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Acknowledgements
Thank you to Brent Murray for organizing a special session at the Society for Wetland Scientists meeting in 2017 which led to this special feature. A. Sutton-Grier was partially supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Grant NA14NES4320003 (Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites – CICS) at the University of Maryland/ESSIC.
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Sutton-Grier, A.E., Sandifer, P.A. Conservation of Wetlands and Other Coastal Ecosystems: a Commentary on their Value to Protect Biodiversity, Reduce Disaster Impacts, and Promote Human Health and Well-Being. Wetlands 39, 1295–1302 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157-018-1039-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157-018-1039-0