Coastal Health of the Moroccan Mediterranean Coast: An Ecosystem Perspective for Coastal Management

Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10498/38659
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/land14061279
ISSN: 2073-445X
Statistics
Metrics and citations
Metadata
Show full item recordDate
2025-06-15Department
Ciencias de la TierraSource
Land, Vol. 14, Núm. 6, 2025Abstract
Coastal health assessment and diagnosis are important tools for decision-making
and coastal management. In this paper, the concept of ecosystem health, which uses
medical terminology to define the state of coastal health, was applied to examine and
diagnose the state of the physical coastal systems of 120 coastal sites along the Moroccan
Mediterranean coastline. Based on this assessment approach, five categories are defined:
(1) “Good Health”, with two subdivisions: (1a) “Health Warning” and (1b) “Surface
Wounds”; (2) “Minor Injury”; (3) “Major Injury”; (4) “On Life Support” and (5) “Deceased”.
According to the results obtained, 38 sites (32%) were classified in the “Good Health”
category, with 35 sites (29%) in the “Health Warning” and 11 (9%) in the “Surface Wounds”
subdivisions; 14 sites (12%) in each of the “Minor Injury” and “Major Injury” categories; no
sites (0%) in the “On Life Support” category; and 8 sites (7%) in the “Deceased” category.
The considerable percentage of sites in the alert and lower categories highlights the level of
degradation and ongoing loss of coastal ecosystems along the Moroccan Mediterranean
coast due to the significant impact of anthropogenic processes and inadequate coastal
management practices, highlighting the current degradation of its physical state and its
capacity to function naturally, i.e., its ability to respond to various present and future
environmental changes. The results and proposals presented in this paper offer important
perspectives for the governance, preservation, and management of coastal systems and
are very useful in limiting and preventing the degradation of coastal systems linked to
natural processes and the development of future anthropogenic activities. In addition,
they stress the importance of protecting sites classified as “healthy” and restoring those
classified as “alert” or “unhealthy”, using sound management strategies based on reliable
scientific data.
Subjects
ecosystem health; coastal systems; anthropogenic activities; governance; management strategiesCollections
- Artículos Científicos [11595]
- Articulos Científicos CC. Tierra [261]
- Artículos Científicos INMAR [1016]






