The Value of Coastal Wetlands for Hurricane Protection

Robert Costanza, Octavio Perez-Maqueo, M Luisa Martinez, Paul Sutton, Sharolyn J. Anderson, Kenneth Mulder

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    Abstract

    Coastal wetlands reduce the damaging effects of hurricanes on coastal communities. A regression model using 34 major US hurricanes since 1980 with the natural log of damage per unit gross domestic product in the hurricane swath as the dependent variable and the natural logs of wind speed and wetland area in the swath as the independent variables was highly significant and explained 60% of the variation in relative damages. A loss of 1 ha of wetland in the model corresponded to an average USD 33 000 (median = USD 5000) increase in storm damage from specific storms. Using this relationship, and taking into account the annual probability of hits by hurricanes of varying intensities, we mapped the annual value of coastal wetlands by 1km X 1km pixel and by state. The annual value ranged from USD 250 to USD 51 000 ha-1 yr-1, with a mean of USD 8240 ha-1 yr-1 (median = USD 3230 ha-1 yr-1) significantly larger than previous estimates. Coastal wetlands in the US were estimated to currently provide USD 23.2 billion yr-1 in storm protection services. Coastal wetlands function as valuable, selfmaintaining "horizontal levees" for storm protection, and also provide a host of other ecosystem services that vertical levees do not. Their restoration and preservation is an extremely cost-effective strategy for society.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)241-248
    JournalAMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment
    Volume37
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2008

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