Abstract

Habitat valuation can provide an objective basis for the prioritisation of conservation and restoration actions. The attribution of fisheries production to particular habitat units is an important measure of value, but is difficult to estimate. Using the case study of habitat use by juvenile banana prawns in a tropical estuary, we assessed the potential to produce valid value estimates at two spatio-conceptual scales: estuary reach and whole estuary. Additionally, we also explore the potential to produce meaningful value estimates at the scale of whole estuary contribution to the offshore fisheries stock. A diversity of potential and actual sources of error and logical problems means that quantification at any scale is at best of uncertain validity and produces estimates that are likely to produce unreliable results if treated as quantitative inputs to production models. Estimates for the whole estuary were the most viable, although still requiring substantial assumptions that may or may not be reasonable in particular situations. Estimates for individual habitats required the unreasonable assumption of limited prawn movement, while estimates of contribution of an estuary to the fishery required difficult-to-obtain and usually unavailable information. Because low occupancy habitats can have trophic value, we also used stable isotope analysis to assess the importance of mangroves and saltmarshes to prawn nutrition. No particular habitat was of critical trophic importance, again suggesting that the habitat-production link is most usefully assessed at the whole-of-estuary scale. While valuable and required to support targeted ecosystem management and protection and restoration efforts, valid estimates of the contribution of particular units to fisheries are likely to be unachievable in many situations.

Highlights

  • Valid estimates are needed to ensure the significance of estuaries and coastal wetlands are given appropriate weight in policy and management decisions [2], and ensuring that offsets and ecosystem repair can be prioritised and their outcomes measured [4, 5]

  • Stable isotope results from the current study show that F. merguiensis juveniles can rely on a range of primary producers as sources of nutrition, and that the importance of the different sources depends on their relative availability, as previously reported for other estuarine species (e.g. [65, 66])

  • Even for a well-studied species such as F. merguiensis there is still a substantial deficit in the information needed to make precise species-productivity links, with substantial research still needed before the available broad-scale biomass estimates can be converted to valid estimates of total biomass and production

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Summary

Introduction

Healthy coastal wetlands have significant intrinsic ecological values that underpin basic human needs, modification of wetlands brings other important socioeconomic advantages (e.g. urbanisation, port construction, construction of tidal exclusion bunds to increase area for agriculture, etc.). Since ecosystem management decisions are often based on economic evaluation, being able to attribute economic value to these systems and their habitats in a quantifiable way is an increasingly important goal [2, 3]. Accurate and valid measures of habitat value are critical for many reasons. Valid estimates are needed to ensure the significance of estuaries and coastal wetlands are given appropriate weight in policy and management decisions [2], and ensuring that offsets and ecosystem repair can be prioritised and their outcomes measured [4, 5]

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