“…Coastal regions, situated between the land and the ocean, are rich in biological resources and diverse ecosystems, and are also the center of global economic development and human activities (Winther et al, 2020;Dai et al, 2022;Dai et al, 2023). However, the rapid development of socio-economy and climate change have continuously intensified the environmental loads on this vital area since the Industrial Revolution, which in turn has had a negative impact on human society and has damaged the sustainability of the region and global oceans (Doney et al, 2012;Winther et al, 2020;Dai et al, 2023). Among many factors, pollution of nutrients, primarily due to massive discharges from agriculture and industry, has caused worldwide expansion of eutrophication in the coastal regions, which can directly endanger the biodiversity, habitat and even mass mortality of impacted marine organisms, and thus eventually impair marine ecosystem and human society (Carpenter, 2008;Deegan et al, 2012;Breitburg et al, 2018;Malone and Newton, 2020;Mauŕe et al, 2021).…”