Cargando…

The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation

This study describes the impact of the first passage of two types of bottom-towed fishing gear on rare protected shellfish-reefs formed by the horse mussel Modiolus modiolus (L.). One of the study sites was trawled and the other was scallop-dredged. Divers collected HD video imagery of epifauna from...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cook, Robert, Fariñas-Franco, Jose M., Gell, Fiona R., Holt, Rohan H. F., Holt, Terry, Lindenbaum, Charles, Porter, Joanne S., Seed, Ray, Skates, Lucie R., Stringell, Thomas B., Sanderson, William G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3743846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23967063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069904
_version_ 1782280531076972544
author Cook, Robert
Fariñas-Franco, Jose M.
Gell, Fiona R.
Holt, Rohan H. F.
Holt, Terry
Lindenbaum, Charles
Porter, Joanne S.
Seed, Ray
Skates, Lucie R.
Stringell, Thomas B.
Sanderson, William G.
author_facet Cook, Robert
Fariñas-Franco, Jose M.
Gell, Fiona R.
Holt, Rohan H. F.
Holt, Terry
Lindenbaum, Charles
Porter, Joanne S.
Seed, Ray
Skates, Lucie R.
Stringell, Thomas B.
Sanderson, William G.
author_sort Cook, Robert
collection PubMed
description This study describes the impact of the first passage of two types of bottom-towed fishing gear on rare protected shellfish-reefs formed by the horse mussel Modiolus modiolus (L.). One of the study sites was trawled and the other was scallop-dredged. Divers collected HD video imagery of epifauna from quadrats at the two study sites and directed infaunal samples from one site. The total number of epifaunal organisms was significantly reduced following a single pass of a trawl (90%) or scallop dredge (59%), as was the diversity of the associated community and the total number of M. modiolus at the trawled site. At both sites declines in anthozoans, hydrozoans, bivalves, echinoderms and ascidians accounted for most of the change. A year later, no recovery was evident at the trawled site and significantly fewer infaunal taxa (polychaetes, malacostracans, bivalves and ophuroids) were recorded in the trawl track. The severity of the two types of impact reflected the undisturbed status of the habitats compared to previous studies. As a ‘priority habitat’ the nature of the impacts described on M. modiolus communities are important to the development of conservation management policy and indicators of condition in Marine Protected Areas (EU Habitats Directive) as well as indicators of ‘Good Environmental Status’ under the European Union Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Conservation managers are under pressure to support decisions with good quality evidence. Elsewhere, indirect studies have shown declines of M. modiolus biogenic communities in fishing grounds. However, given the protected status of the rare habitat, premeditated demonstration of direct impact is unethical or illegal in Marine Protected Areas. This study therefore provides a unique opportunity to investigate the impact from fishing gear whilst at the same time reflecting on the dilemma of evidence-based conservation management.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3743846
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37438462013-08-21 The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation Cook, Robert Fariñas-Franco, Jose M. Gell, Fiona R. Holt, Rohan H. F. Holt, Terry Lindenbaum, Charles Porter, Joanne S. Seed, Ray Skates, Lucie R. Stringell, Thomas B. Sanderson, William G. PLoS One Research Article This study describes the impact of the first passage of two types of bottom-towed fishing gear on rare protected shellfish-reefs formed by the horse mussel Modiolus modiolus (L.). One of the study sites was trawled and the other was scallop-dredged. Divers collected HD video imagery of epifauna from quadrats at the two study sites and directed infaunal samples from one site. The total number of epifaunal organisms was significantly reduced following a single pass of a trawl (90%) or scallop dredge (59%), as was the diversity of the associated community and the total number of M. modiolus at the trawled site. At both sites declines in anthozoans, hydrozoans, bivalves, echinoderms and ascidians accounted for most of the change. A year later, no recovery was evident at the trawled site and significantly fewer infaunal taxa (polychaetes, malacostracans, bivalves and ophuroids) were recorded in the trawl track. The severity of the two types of impact reflected the undisturbed status of the habitats compared to previous studies. As a ‘priority habitat’ the nature of the impacts described on M. modiolus communities are important to the development of conservation management policy and indicators of condition in Marine Protected Areas (EU Habitats Directive) as well as indicators of ‘Good Environmental Status’ under the European Union Marine Strategy Framework Directive. Conservation managers are under pressure to support decisions with good quality evidence. Elsewhere, indirect studies have shown declines of M. modiolus biogenic communities in fishing grounds. However, given the protected status of the rare habitat, premeditated demonstration of direct impact is unethical or illegal in Marine Protected Areas. This study therefore provides a unique opportunity to investigate the impact from fishing gear whilst at the same time reflecting on the dilemma of evidence-based conservation management. Public Library of Science 2013-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3743846/ /pubmed/23967063 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069904 Text en © 2013 Cook et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cook, Robert
Fariñas-Franco, Jose M.
Gell, Fiona R.
Holt, Rohan H. F.
Holt, Terry
Lindenbaum, Charles
Porter, Joanne S.
Seed, Ray
Skates, Lucie R.
Stringell, Thomas B.
Sanderson, William G.
The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title_full The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title_fullStr The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title_full_unstemmed The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title_short The Substantial First Impact of Bottom Fishing on Rare Biodiversity Hotspots: A Dilemma for Evidence-Based Conservation
title_sort substantial first impact of bottom fishing on rare biodiversity hotspots: a dilemma for evidence-based conservation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3743846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23967063
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069904
work_keys_str_mv AT cookrobert thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT farinasfrancojosem thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT gellfionar thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT holtrohanhf thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT holtterry thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT lindenbaumcharles thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT porterjoannes thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT seedray thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT skateslucier thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT stringellthomasb thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT sandersonwilliamg thesubstantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT cookrobert substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT farinasfrancojosem substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT gellfionar substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT holtrohanhf substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT holtterry substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT lindenbaumcharles substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT porterjoannes substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT seedray substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT skateslucier substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT stringellthomasb substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation
AT sandersonwilliamg substantialfirstimpactofbottomfishingonrarebiodiversityhotspotsadilemmaforevidencebasedconservation