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Community change within a Caribbean coral reef Marine Protected Area following two decades of local management
Authors
A Halford
AJ Chael
+61 more
AJ Cheal
BE Huntington
BS Halpern
CD Stallings
Christopher J. Fulton
CM Eakin
CM Roberts
DC Zeller
DH Williamson
DJ Coker
DR Bellwood
DR Bellwood
DR Bellwood
ER Selig
G De’ath
GP Jones
GR Almany
GR Russ
GR Russ
Gregoor van Laake
HB Harrison
IM Côté
J Bruno
J Claudet
JBC Jackson
JH Bruggemann
JH Connell
JPT Higgins
JT Kerry
L Alvarez-Filip
LJ McCook
M Nyström
M Westera
Mae M. Noble
MH Ledlie
Michael L. Berumen
MJ Paddack
ML Berumen
ML Berumen
NAJ Graham
NAJ Graham
NVC Polunin
PJ Mumby
PP Molloy
R Pollnac
RC Babcock
SA Sandin
SC Cardoso
SD Gaines
SD Jupiter
SE Lester
Sharyn Jane Goldstien
SK Wilson
SK Wilson
T Goreau
TA Gardner
TP Hughes
TP Hughes
TR McClanahan
W Toller
WF Prechet
Publication date
14 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PLoS ONE 8 (2013): e54069, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0054069.Structural change in both the habitat and reef-associated fish assemblages within spatially managed coral reefs can provide key insights into the benefits and limitations of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). While MPA zoning effects on particular target species are well reported, we are yet to fully resolve the various affects of spatial management on the structure of coral reef communities over decadal time scales. Here, we document mixed affects of MPA zoning on fish density, biomass and species richness over the 21 years since establishment of the Saba Marine Park (SMP). Although we found significantly greater biomass and species richness of reef-associated fishes within shallow habitats (5 meters depth) closed to fishing, this did not hold for deeper (15 m) habitats, and there was a widespread decline (38% decrease) in live hard coral cover and a 68% loss of carnivorous reef fishes across all zones of the SMP from the 1990s to 2008. Given the importance of live coral for the maintenance and replenishment of reef fishes, and the likely role of chronic disturbance in driving coral decline across the region, we explore how local spatial management can help protect coral reef ecosystems within the context of large-scale environmental pressures and disturbances outside the purview of local MPA management.Funding was provided by the Saba Conservation Foundation ((SCF), King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, The Australian National University and Australian Research Council
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