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Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs

Management authorities seldom have the capacity to comprehensively address the full suite of anthropogenic stressors, particularly in the coastal zone where numerous threats can act simultaneously to impact reefs and other ecosystems. This situation requires tools to prioritise management interventi...

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Autores principales: Gilby, Ben L., Olds, Andrew D., Connolly, Rod M., Stevens, Tim, Henderson, Christopher J., Maxwell, Paul S., Tibbetts, Ian R., Schoeman, David S., Rissik, David, Schlacher, Thomas A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5072624/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27764164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164934
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author Gilby, Ben L.
Olds, Andrew D.
Connolly, Rod M.
Stevens, Tim
Henderson, Christopher J.
Maxwell, Paul S.
Tibbetts, Ian R.
Schoeman, David S.
Rissik, David
Schlacher, Thomas A.
author_facet Gilby, Ben L.
Olds, Andrew D.
Connolly, Rod M.
Stevens, Tim
Henderson, Christopher J.
Maxwell, Paul S.
Tibbetts, Ian R.
Schoeman, David S.
Rissik, David
Schlacher, Thomas A.
author_sort Gilby, Ben L.
collection PubMed
description Management authorities seldom have the capacity to comprehensively address the full suite of anthropogenic stressors, particularly in the coastal zone where numerous threats can act simultaneously to impact reefs and other ecosystems. This situation requires tools to prioritise management interventions that result in optimum ecological outcomes under a set of constraints. Here we develop one such tool, introducing a Bayesian Belief Network to model the ecological condition of inshore coral reefs in Moreton Bay (Australia) under a range of management actions. Empirical field data was used to model a suite of possible ecological responses of coral reef assemblages to five key management actions both in the sea (e.g. expansion of reserves, mangrove & seagrass restoration, fishing restrictions) and on land (e.g. lower inputs of sediment and sewage from treatment plants). Models show that expanding marine reserves (a ‘marine action’) and reducing sediment inputs from the catchments (a ‘land action’) were the most effective investments to achieve a better status of reefs in the Bay, with both having been included in >58% of scenarios with positive outcomes, and >98% of the most effective (5(th) percentile) scenarios. Heightened fishing restrictions, restoring habitats, and reducing nutrient discharges from wastewater treatment plants have additional, albeit smaller effects. There was no evidence that combining individual management actions would consistently produce sizeable synergistic until after maximum investment on both marine reserves (i.e. increasing reserve extent from 31 to 62% of reefs) and sediments (i.e. rehabilitating 6350 km of waterways within catchments to reduce sediment loads by 50%) were implemented. The method presented here provides a useful tool to prioritize environmental actions in situations where multiple competing management interventions exist for coral reefs and in other systems subjected to multiple stressor from the land and the sea.
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spelling pubmed-50726242016-10-27 Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs Gilby, Ben L. Olds, Andrew D. Connolly, Rod M. Stevens, Tim Henderson, Christopher J. Maxwell, Paul S. Tibbetts, Ian R. Schoeman, David S. Rissik, David Schlacher, Thomas A. PLoS One Research Article Management authorities seldom have the capacity to comprehensively address the full suite of anthropogenic stressors, particularly in the coastal zone where numerous threats can act simultaneously to impact reefs and other ecosystems. This situation requires tools to prioritise management interventions that result in optimum ecological outcomes under a set of constraints. Here we develop one such tool, introducing a Bayesian Belief Network to model the ecological condition of inshore coral reefs in Moreton Bay (Australia) under a range of management actions. Empirical field data was used to model a suite of possible ecological responses of coral reef assemblages to five key management actions both in the sea (e.g. expansion of reserves, mangrove & seagrass restoration, fishing restrictions) and on land (e.g. lower inputs of sediment and sewage from treatment plants). Models show that expanding marine reserves (a ‘marine action’) and reducing sediment inputs from the catchments (a ‘land action’) were the most effective investments to achieve a better status of reefs in the Bay, with both having been included in >58% of scenarios with positive outcomes, and >98% of the most effective (5(th) percentile) scenarios. Heightened fishing restrictions, restoring habitats, and reducing nutrient discharges from wastewater treatment plants have additional, albeit smaller effects. There was no evidence that combining individual management actions would consistently produce sizeable synergistic until after maximum investment on both marine reserves (i.e. increasing reserve extent from 31 to 62% of reefs) and sediments (i.e. rehabilitating 6350 km of waterways within catchments to reduce sediment loads by 50%) were implemented. The method presented here provides a useful tool to prioritize environmental actions in situations where multiple competing management interventions exist for coral reefs and in other systems subjected to multiple stressor from the land and the sea. Public Library of Science 2016-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5072624/ /pubmed/27764164 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164934 Text en © 2016 Gilby 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gilby, Ben L.
Olds, Andrew D.
Connolly, Rod M.
Stevens, Tim
Henderson, Christopher J.
Maxwell, Paul S.
Tibbetts, Ian R.
Schoeman, David S.
Rissik, David
Schlacher, Thomas A.
Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title_full Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title_fullStr Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title_full_unstemmed Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title_short Optimising Land-Sea Management for Inshore Coral Reefs
title_sort optimising land-sea management for inshore coral reefs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5072624/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27764164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164934
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