Abstract
Global climate change is driving the redistribution of marine species and thereby potentially restructuring endemic communities. Understanding how localised conservation measures such as protection from additional human pressures can confer resilience to ecosystems is therefore an important area of research. Here, we examine the resilience of a no-take marine reserve (NTR) to the establishment of urchin barrens habitat. The barrens habitat is created through overgrazing of kelp by an invading urchin species that is expanding its range within a hotspot of rapid climate change. In our study region, a multi-year monitoring program provides a unique time-series of benthic imagery collected by an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) within an NTR and nearby reference areas. We use a Bayesian hierarchical spatio-temporal modelling approach to estimate whether the NTR is associated with reduced formation of urchin barrens, and thereby enhances local resilience. Our approach controls for the important environmental covariates of depth and habitat complexity (quantified as rugosity derived from multibeam sonar mapping), as well as spatial and temporal dependence. We find evidence for the NTR conferring resilience with a strong reserve effect that suggests improved resistance to the establishment of barrens. However, we find a concerning and consistent trajectory of increasing barrens cover in both the reference areas and the NTR, with the odds of barrens increasing by approximately 32% per year. Thus, whereas the reserve is demonstrating resilience to the initial establishment of barrens, there is currently no evidence of recovery once barrens are established. We also find that depth and rugosity covariates derived from multibeam mapping provide useful predictors for barrens occurrence. These results have important management implications as they demonstrate: (i) the importance of monitoring programs to inform adaptive management; (ii) that NTRs provide a potential local conservation management tool under climate change impacts, and (iii) that technologies such as AUVs and multibeam mapping can be harnessed to inform regional decision-making. Continuation of the current monitoring program is required to assess whether the NTR can provide long term protection from a phase shift that replaces kelp with urchin barrens.
Highlights
Distributional changes of marine species associated with climate change are being documented worldwide (e.g. [1, 2])
The Governor Island reserve always had a lower observed percentage of barrens when compared to any of the reference sites, with less than one percent of images being classified as barrens habitat in any year
Our results clearly demonstrate the resistance to the establishment of C. rodgersii urchin barrens of a Tasmanian no-take marine reserve (NTR) when compared to nearby reference areas where fishing is permitted
Summary
Distributional changes of marine species associated with climate change are being documented worldwide (e.g. [1, 2]). Conservation measures that may confer resilience, such as the protection of habitats or species from additional human pressures [6], are typically legislated and managed on smaller scales than those over which climate change impacts occur. No-take reserves (NTRs) are areas where fishing pressure is reduced/removed. NTRs provide researchers with a means of examining the resilience of ecosystems that may have more “intact” communities compared to fished areas. The greater abundance and size of predators in some NTRs has been linked to increased community stability when compared to adjacent fished areas The number of empirical studies examining the effect of NTRs on local ecosystem resilience to climate-driven invasive species impacts is limited by the technical difficulties associated with acquiring high-quality time-series monitoring data in the marine environment
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.