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Research field

Coastal Ecology

Coastal ecology examines the structure, function, and dynamics of ecosystems at the land-sea interface, encompassing intertidal zones, estuaries, mangrove forests, salt marshes, seagrass meadows, and sandy beaches. These ecosystems rank among the most productive and biologically diverse on Earth yet face intense pressures from sea-level rise, storm intensification, coastal development, nutrient runoff, and species invasions. Coastal ecologists investigate food web dynamics, habitat connectivity, nursery function for commercially important fish and shellfish, nutrient cycling, and the carbon sequestration capacity of blue carbon ecosystems. Monitoring programs deploy eDNA surveys, remote sensing platforms, and sensor arrays to track long-term change, while restoration ecologists design interventions to reestablish degraded habitats. The field provides science underpinning coastal resilience planning, fisheries management, and biodiversity conservation policy globally.

14,000 Researchers
$920,000 per year Avg funding
5 Subfields
5 Top institutions

Top institutions

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

University of Hawaii

IFREMER France

Australian Institute of Marine Science

Subfields

Intertidal Ecology Estuarine Science Mangrove Ecology Seagrass Dynamics Coastal Biodiversity and Conservation

Key technologies

Autonomous Underwater Vehicles

Drone Mapping of Intertidal Zones

eDNA Monitoring

Tidal Habitat Sensors

Remote Sensing Imagery Analysis

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