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1.
Glob Chang Biol ; 28(15): 4577-4588, 2022 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35583810

RESUMEN

Given the accelerating rate of biodiversity loss, the need to prioritize marine areas for protection represents a major conservation challenge. The three-dimensionality of marine life and ecosystems is an inherent element of complexity for setting spatial conservation plans. Yet, the confidence of any recommendation largely depends on shifting climate, which triggers a global redistribution of biodiversity, suggesting the inclusion of time as a fourth dimension. Here, we developed a depth-specific prioritization analysis to inform the design of protected areas, further including metrics of climate-driven changes in the ocean. Climate change was captured in this analysis by considering the projected future distribution of >2000 benthic and pelagic species inhabiting the Mediterranean Sea, combined with climatic stability and heterogeneity metrics of the seascape. We identified important areas based on both biological and climatic criteria, where conservation focus should be given in priority when designing a three-dimensional, climate-smart protected area network. We detected spatially concise, conservation priority areas, distributed around the basin, that protected marine areas almost equally across all depth zones. Our approach highlights the importance of deep sea zones as priority areas to meet conservation targets for future marine biodiversity, while suggesting that spatial prioritization schemes, that focus on a static two-dimensional distribution of biodiversity data, might fail to englobe both the vertical properties of species distributions and the fine and larger-scale impacts associated with climate change.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Refugio de Fauna , Biodiversidad , Cambio Climático , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Mar Mediterráneo
2.
Sci Total Environ ; 830: 154696, 2022 Jul 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35318063

RESUMEN

Understanding how climate change would affect biota inhabiting sensitive and highly valuable ecosystems, spanning broad regions, is essential to anticipate implications for biodiversity and humans, and to identify management and mitigation measures. Traditionally, assessments to evaluate climatic risks over broad regions and for many species implement models that allow the projection of a climate-driven redistribution of biodiversity. Still, the wealth and quality of the background information (e.g., species presence data) constrain the accuracy and representativeness of such frameworks. As an alternative, here, we developed a twofold approach to assess the vulnerability of 86 European freshwater fish. We accounted for shifts in a multidimensional climatic space of broader hydrological units that host freshwater bodies in Europe. We then linked metrics of their climatic stability with groups of species, which were generated from six intrinsic traits that shape species adaptive capacity to climate change. Our results demonstrated that the climate of all (n = 538) river sub-basins hosted in the European Union territory would change by 2100, with more than 10% of them being projected to gain completely novel climates. Sub-basins predicted to lose more than 90% of their current climatic space were mainly identified in the area around the Baltic Sea, but also in Mediterranean regions (i.e., Iberian Peninsula). Important numbers of fish species with life history strategies that are considered susceptible to climate change were identified in sub-basins that were predicted to completely lose their current climatic conditions. Clearly, the climate of valuable freshwater ecosystems is changing, affecting species and their communities in varying ways. The risk is high, and is not limited to specific regions; thus, new effective strategies and measures are needed to conserve freshwater fish and their habitats across Europe.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Ríos , Animales , Cambio Climático , Peces , Agua Dulce
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 792: 148397, 2021 Oct 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34153759

RESUMEN

Rising ocean temperature impacts the functionality and structure of ecosystems, further triggering the redistribution of biodiversity. Still, the magnitude and anticipated impacts of ocean warming are not expected to be uniform across marine space. Here, we developed a two-fold index-based approach to provide an integrated climatic vulnerability assessment of the marine surfaces which are enclosed within protected areas in the Mediterranean Sea. We first built a climatic stability index, based on metrics of analog-based velocity of climate change over a 120-year period (1950-2069), to assess patterns of climate dynamics within the marine protected surfaces. To provide a vulnerability ranking of protected surfaces under climate change, we combined this climate-related index with an index of community stability, reflecting the projected distribution shifts of 71 species of high conservation value. Our analyses revealed a highly heterogeneous and dynamic climatic space, with increasing but spatially inconsistent patterns of climate change velocities over successive 30-year periods. We found that about 62% of the protected marine surface might be subjected to low/very low climatic stability. About 70% of the protected waters were also found to be of limited community stability. Thus, protected surfaces across the Mediterranean basin were characterized by high vulnerability under changing climatic conditions, while only 5.7% of them exhibited high and very high stability based on both indices. Our findings suggest that combining information on climate change dynamics and biotic stability could offer spatially explicit insights which cannot be obtained based simply on the ecological dimensions of conservation planning.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Ecosistema , Biodiversidad , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Predicción
4.
Sci Total Environ ; 755(Pt 1): 142564, 2021 Feb 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33035971

RESUMEN

Climate change (CC) is a key, global driver of change of marine ecosystems. At local and regional scales, other local human stressors (LS) can interact with CC and modify its effects on marine ecosystems. Understanding the response of the marine environment to the combined effects of CC and LS is crucial to inform marine ecosystem-based management and planning, yet our knowledge of the potential effects of such interactions is fragmented. At a global scale, we explored how cumulative effect assessments (CEAs) have addressed CC in the marine realm and discuss progress and shortcomings of current approaches. For this we conducted a systematic review on how CEAs investigated at different levels of biological organization ecological responses, functional aspects, and the combined effect of CC and HS. Globally, the effects of 52 LS and of 27 CC-related stressors on the marine environment have been studied in combination, such as industrial fisheries with change in temperature, or sea level rise with artisanal fisheries, marine litter, change in sediment load and introduced alien species. CC generally intensified the effects of LS at species level. At trophic groups and ecosystem levels, the effects of CC either intensified or mitigated the effects of other HS depending on the trophic groups or the environmental conditions involved, thus suggesting that the combined effects of CC and LS are context-dependent and vary among and within ecosystems. Our results highlight that large-scale assessments on the spatial interaction and combined effects of CC and LS remain limited. More importantly, our results strengthen the urgent need of CEAs to capture local-scale effects of stressors that can exacerbate climate-induced changes. Ultimately, this will allow identifying management measures that aid counteracting CC effects at relevant scales.


Asunto(s)
Cambio Climático , Ecosistema , Explotaciones Pesqueras , Humanos , Especies Introducidas , Temperatura
5.
Sci Total Environ ; 612: 1132-1140, 2018 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28892857

RESUMEN

Marine ecosystems are increasingly threatened by the cumulative effects of multiple human pressures. Cumulative effect assessments (CEAs) are needed to inform environmental policy and guide ecosystem-based management. Yet, CEAs are inherently complex and seldom linked to real-world management processes. Therefore we propose entrenching CEAs in a risk management process, comprising the steps of risk identification, risk analysis and risk evaluation. We provide guidance to operationalize a risk-based approach to CEAs by describing for each step guiding principles and desired outcomes, scientific challenges and practical solutions. We reviewed the treatment of uncertainty in CEAs and the contribution of different tools and data sources to the implementation of a risk based approach to CEAs. We show that a risk-based approach to CEAs decreases complexity, allows for the transparent treatment of uncertainty and streamlines the uptake of scientific outcomes into the science-policy interface. Hence, its adoption can help bridging the gap between science and decision-making in ecosystem-based management.

6.
Sci Adv ; 3(9): e1600730, 2017 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28948215

RESUMEN

We document a tendency for published estimates of population size in sea turtles to be increasing rather than decreasing across the globe. To examine the population status of the seven species of sea turtle globally, we obtained 299 time series of annual nesting abundance with a total of 4417 annual estimates. The time series ranged in length from 6 to 47 years (mean, 16.2 years). When levels of abundance were summed within regional management units (RMUs) for each species, there were upward trends in 12 RMUs versus downward trends in 5 RMUs. This prevalence of more upward than downward trends was also evident in the individual time series, where we found 95 significant increases in abundance and 35 significant decreases. Adding to this encouraging news for sea turtle conservation, we show that even small sea turtle populations have the capacity to recover, that is, Allee effects appear unimportant. Positive trends in abundance are likely linked to the effective protection of eggs and nesting females, as well as reduced bycatch. However, conservation concerns remain, such as the decline in leatherback turtles in the Eastern and Western Pacific. Furthermore, we also show that, often, time series are too short to identify trends in abundance. Our findings highlight the importance of continued conservation and monitoring efforts that underpin this global conservation success story.


Asunto(s)
Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Tortugas , Animales , Biodiversidad , Ecosistema , Densidad de Población , Dinámica Poblacional
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