134 research outputs found
Predation in marine protected areas: preliminary results of the effects on growth and survivorship of newly-settled coral reef fishes; Depredacion en las areas marinas protegidas: efecto sobre el crecimiento y la superviviencia de larvas de peces de arrecifes coralinos recientemente asentados
Larval supply and recruitment of coral reef fishes to Marine Reserves in the upper Florida Keys, USA
Ecological effects of full and partial protection in the crowded Mediterranean Sea: a regional meta-analysis
Marine protected areas (MPAs) are a cornerstone of marine conservation. Globally, the number and coverage of MPAs are increasing, but MPA implementation lags in many human-dominated regions. In areas with intense competition for space and resources, evaluation of the effects of MPAs is crucial to inform decisions. In the human-dominated Mediterranean Sea, fully protected areas occupy only 0.04% of its surface. We evaluated the impacts of full and partial protection on biomass and density of fish assemblages, some commercially important fishes, and sea urchins in 24 Mediterranean MPAs. We explored the relationships between the level of protection and MPA size, age, and enforcement. Results revealed significant positive effects of protection for fisheries target species and negative effects for urchins as their predators benefited from protection. Full protection provided stronger effects than partial protection. Benefits of full protection for fish biomass were only correlated with the level of MPA enforcement; fish density was higher in older, better enforced, and - interestingly - smaller MPAs. Our finding that even small, well-enforced, fully protected areas can have significant ecological effects is encouraging for "crowded" marine environments. However, more data are needed to evaluate sufficient MPA sizes for protecting populations of species with varying mobility levels
Biological Effects Within No-Take Marine Reserves: A global Synthesis
The study and implementation of no-take marine reserves have increased rapidly over the past decade, providing ample data on the biological effects of reserve protection for a wide range of geographic locations and organisms. The plethora of new studies affords the opportunity to reevaluate previous findings and address formerly unanswered questions with extensive data syntheses. Our results show, on average, positive effects of reserve protection on the biomass, numerical density, species richness, and size of organisms within their boundaries which are remarkably similar to those of past syntheses despite a near doubling of data. New analyses indicate that (1) these results do not appear to be an artifact of reserves being sited in better locations; (2) results do not appear to be driven by displaced fishing effort outside of reserves; (3) contrary to often-made assertions, reserves have similar if not greater positive effects in temperate settings, at least for reef ecosystems; (4) even small reserves can produce significant biological responses irrespective of latitude, although more data are needed to test whether reserve effects scale with reserve size; and (5) effects of reserves vary for different taxonomic groups and for taxa with various characteristics, and not all species increase in response to reserve protection. There is considerable variation in the responses documented across all the reserves in our data set—variability which cannot be entirely explained by which species were studied. We suggest that reserve characteristics and context, particularly the intensity of fishing outside the reserve and inside the reserve before implementation, play key roles in determining the direction and magnitude of the reserve response. However, despite considerable variability, positive responses are far more common than no differences or negative responses, validating the potential for well designed and enforced reserves to serve as globally important conservation and management tools
Environmental representativity in marine protected area networks over large and partly unexplored seascapes
Converting assemblages of marine protected areas (MPAs) into functional MPA networks requires political will, multidisciplinary information, coordinated action and time. We developed a new framework to assist planning environmental representativity in a network across the marine space of Portugal, responding to a political commitment to protect 14% of its area by 2020. An aggregate conservation value was estimated for each of the 27 habitats identified, from intertidal waters to the deep sea. This value was based on expert-judgment scoring for environmental properties and features relevant for conservation, chosen to reflect the strategic objectives of the network, thus providing an objective link between conservation commitments and habitat representativity in space. Additionally, habitats' vulnerability to existing anthropogenic pressures and sensitivity to climate change were also scored. The area coverage of each habitat in Portugal and within existing MPAs (regionally and nationally) was assigned to a scale of five orders of magnitude (from 10%) to assess rarity and existing representation. Aggregate conservation value per habitat was negatively correlated with area coverage, positively correlated with vulnerability and was not correlated with sensitivity. The proposed framework offers a multi-dimensional support tool for MPA network development, in particular regarding the prioritization of new habitats to protect, when the goal is to achieve specific targets while ensuring representativity across large areas and complex habitat mosaics. It requires less information and computation effort in comparison to more quantitative approaches, while still providing an objective instrument to scrutinize progress on the implementation of politically set conservation targets.Agência financiadora Número do subsídio
Oceanic Observatory of Madeira
M1420-01-0145-FEDER-000001-OOM
national funds through FCT
UID/BIA/00329/2013
UID/Multi/04326/2013
Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia
SFRH/BPD/95334/2013
CESAM - FCT/MEC through national funds
UID/AMB/50017 - POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007638
FEDER
FCT
SFRH/BPD/94320/2013
MARE - UID/MAR/04292/2019
EU through the Cohesion Fund
POSEUR-03-2215-FC-000046
POSEUR-03-2215-FC-000047
FCT national funds
ECO/28687/2017info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Ocean protection quality is lagging behind quantity: Applying a scientific framework to assess real marine protected area progress against the 30 by 30 target
The international community set a global conservation target to protect at least
30% of the ocean by 2030 (“30 × 30”) to reverse biodiversity loss, including
through marine protected areas (MPAs). However, varied MPAs result in significantly
different conservation outcomes, making MPA coverage alone an
inadequate metric.We used TheMPA Guide framework to assess the the world’s
largest 100 MPAs by area, representing nearly 90% of reported global MPA coverage
and 7.3% of the global ocean area, and analyzed the distribution of MPA
quality across political and ecological regions. A quarter of the assessed MPA
coverage is not implemented, and one-third is incompatible with the conservation
of nature. Two factors contribute to this outcome: (1) many reported MPAs
lack regulations or management, and (2) some MPAs allow high-impact activities.
Fully and highly protected MPAs account for one-third of the assessed area
but are unevenly distributed across ecoregions in part because some nations have
designated large, highly protected MPAs in their overseas or remote territories.
Indicators of MPA quality, not only coverage, are needed to ensure a global network
of MPAs that covers at least 30% of the ocean and effectively safeguards
representative marine ecosystems from destructive human activities.Fundaçãopara a Ciência e Tecnologia - FCTinfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio
An opinion paper: emphasis on white muscle development and growth to improve farmed fish flesh quality
Due to rapid depletion of wild stocks, the necessity to cultivate fish is eminent. Current fish farming practices seek to improve flesh quality. The notion that white muscles are the main target of the fishing industry is emphasized. A novel approach is suggested based on the development of white muscles in wild fish from eggs to adults. A compilation of facts about white muscle structure, function and ontogeny is followed by an account of the changes in swimming behaviour and performance related to the use of white muscle during growth from larva to adult. Ecological data narrate early swimming performance with white muscle development and growth, unveiling some of the important natural selection factors eliminating weak swimmers and poor growers from the breeding stock. A comparison between fish culture practise and natural conditions reveals fundamental differences. New approaches following wild breeding processes promise several important advantages regarding the quality of white muscle
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Marine Protected Area Networks: Assessing Whether the Whole Is Greater than the Sum of Its Parts
Anthropogenic impacts are increasingly affecting the world’s oceans. Networks of marine protected areas (MPAs) provide an
option for increasing the ecological and economic benefits often provided by single MPAs. It is vital to empirically assess the
effects of MPA networks and to prioritize the monitoring data necessary to explain those effects. We summarize the types of
MPA networks based on their intended management outcomes and illustrate a framework for evaluating whether a
connectivity network is providing an outcome greater than the sum of individual MPA effects. We use an analysis of an MPA
network in Hawai’i to compare networked MPAs to non-networked MPAs to demonstrate results consistent with a network
effect. We assert that planning processes for MPA networks should identify their intended outcomes while also employing
coupled field monitoring-simulation modeling approaches, a powerful way to prioritize the most relevant monitoring data
for empirically assessing MPA network performance
The Science of Marine Protected Areas (3rd edition, Mediterranean)
The main purpose of the booklet is to present the latest scientific information about the effects of MPAs in the Mediterranean in order to inform current management dialogues. This is particularly relevant given the increasing legislative frameworks and political initiatives to implement networks of MPAs in countries across the Mediterranean Sea. Importantly, this Edition does much more than simply tailor the earlier content for the Mediterranean region. The edition update the basic content of the booklet, drawing on the wealth of new published scientific literature, highlighting case studies from the Mediterranean Sea
Correlations of condition factor and gonadosomatic, hepatosomatic and lipo-somatic relations of Leptodactylus macrosternum (ANURA: Leptodactylidae) in the Brazilian Semi-arid
ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to assess variations of the condition factor (K1) in relation to the gonadosomatic- RGS and energy reserves (hepatosomatic - RWL and liposomatic - RFB relations) of Leptodactylus macrosternum and their relationship to climate variation in the Northeast of Brazil, Caatinga area, state of Paraiba. The animals were captured fortnightly through active collecting, between January and December 2013. Significant differences were observed in the monthly variations of K1, RGS and RFB indices in male and female L. macrosternum over the months of collection. In males, K1 showed no significant relationship with the other variables. In females, RGS values only show notable correlations with RWF and K1 values. K1 values showed significant correlations with all other weight and length ratios. Climate change in the HFOB region showed significant relationships with the variation of the indexes evaluated, with the exception of RWF. The variation of K1, RGS, RWL and RFB values over the months of collection as well as their relation with the local climatic variation, showed a brief reproductive activity for the species
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