Miracle in Marseille: How reducing pollution can bring the ocean back to life | World News
The resurgence of Posidonia oceanica seagrass meadows in Marseille is an important example of ocean resilience, showing that nature is capable of recovering if the pressures imposed by humans are reduced. Over the years, untreated urban wastewater has destroyed large areas of Posidonia’s marine meadows, which provide important ecosystem services such as carbon storage and habitat for numerous marine species. After a large new wastewater treatment plant was built in 1987 and a number of restrictions on industrial use were introduced, researchers showed that recovery rates were “excellent.” These grasslands are able to expand on their own at low cost through a method called passive restoration, compared to the more expensive method of planting seagrass seedlings. Underwater forests (meadows) now extend across much of the seafloor, creating a global model for coastal protection and demonstrating the long-term success of strict pollution control policies.
How reducing pollution is bringing seagrass back to life in Marseille, France
Research published in Marine Environmental Research highlights that the main driver of Neptune grass’s return is a significant reduction in organic matter and industrial pollutants. By 1987, the city of Marseille converted its wastewater system to utilize treatment plants, thereby reducing turbidity in the area. As a result, light can penetrate the seafloor, allowing the natural spread of existing seagrass beds that have been dormant or receding for nearly 100 years.
Why nature trumps human intervention
Research in Marseille shows that passive restoration, such as removing sources of degradation, is far more effective than human-led planting efforts. Active restoration often results in much lower success rates and higher costs, but the natural repopulation of Posidonia oceanica within the Marseille Bay shows that the species has great resilience once water clarity and sediment quality are restored.
How seagrass supports the Mediterranean climate
The “lungs of the Mediterranean” are extremely important for providing essential services of coastline protection and carbon storage. The European Environment Agency has identified that the restoration of these grasslands, particularly those along the French coast, is crucial to achieving “Good Environmental Status” (GES) under the Marine Strategy Framework Directive. The restoration of seagrass near Marseille is an important contributor to regional biodiversity, providing habitat for hundreds of different marine species.
How an EU directive protects Marseille’s marine life
Regular monitoring by the French Water Authority (Agence de l’Eau) confirms that the continued health of the seagrass is closely linked to compliance with the EU Municipal Wastewater Treatment Directive. Regular sampling of coastal waters near Marseille shows a drop in levels of heavy metals and nitrogen, substances that previously caused algae blooms (eutrophication) that suffocated seagrass populations.