Abstract

Biodiversity is a portmanteau word to indicate the variety of life at all levels from genes to ecosystems, but it is often simplistically equated to species richness; the word ecodiversity has thus been coined to address habitat variety. Biodiversity represents the core of the natural capital, and as such needs to be quantified and followed over time. Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are a major tool for biodiversity conservation at sea. Monitoring of both species and habitat diversity in MPAs is therefore mandatory and must include both inventory and periodic surveillance activities. In the case of inventories, the ideal would be to census all species and all habitats, but while the latter goal can be within reach, the former seems unattainable. Species inventory should be commeasured to investigation effort, while habitat inventory should be based on mapping. Both inventories may profit from suitability spatial modelling. Periodic surveillance actions should privilege conspicuous species and priority habitats. Efficient descriptor taxa and ecological indices are recommended to evaluate environmental status. While it seems obvious that surveillance activities should be carried out with regular recurrence, diachronic inventories and mapping are rarely carried out. Time series are of prime importance to detect marine ecosystem change even in the absence of direct human impacts.

Highlights

  • Biodiversity is a portmanteau word that expresses the value of biological variety at different levels of integration, from genes to the entire ecosystem [1,2]

  • The meaning of biodiversity is above all linked to the concept of species richness, that is, the number of species found in a specific site, region or ecosystem

  • Conciliating human development with biodiversity conservation is at the root of the emerging discipline of socioecology [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Biodiversity is a portmanteau word that expresses the value of biological variety at different levels of integration, from genes to the entire ecosystem [1,2]. The marine environment shows a higher phyletic diversity and a greater functional and trophic diversity [11] Apart from these differences, the role and problems of biodiversity at sea are the same as on land: they are less known and/or perceived [12,13]. Their opinion reflected the widespread belief that the oceans were an inexhaustible source of food and resources for humanity [19] These ideas have persisted to the present day, and only recently awareness has grown that marine species may be at risk of extinction and marine ecosystems at risk of degradation [20,21]. The present viewpoint paper will discuss these aspects mostly based on experiences in Italian MPAs, expanding and updating previous contributions [38,39]

Monitoring as an Inventory
Monitoring as Surveillance
What to Monitor?
Findings
Final Remarks
Full Text
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