Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.

Marine protected areas (MPAs) can contribute to protecting biodiversity and managing ocean activities, including fishing. There is, however, limited evidence of ecological responses to blue water MPAs. We conducted the first comprehensive evaluation of impacts on fisheries production and ecological...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eric Gilman, Milani Chaloupka, Mark Fitchett, Danielle L Cantrell, Matt Merrifield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0235129&type=printable
_version_ 1826574353870880768
author Eric Gilman
Milani Chaloupka
Mark Fitchett
Danielle L Cantrell
Matt Merrifield
author_facet Eric Gilman
Milani Chaloupka
Mark Fitchett
Danielle L Cantrell
Matt Merrifield
author_sort Eric Gilman
collection DOAJ
description Marine protected areas (MPAs) can contribute to protecting biodiversity and managing ocean activities, including fishing. There is, however, limited evidence of ecological responses to blue water MPAs. We conducted the first comprehensive evaluation of impacts on fisheries production and ecological responses to pelagic MPAs of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument. A Bayesian time series-based counterfactual modelling approach using fishery-dependent data was used to compare the temporal response in the MPAs to three reference regions for standardized catch rates, lengths, trophic level of the catch and species diversity. Catch rates of bigeye tuna, the main target species (Kingman/Palmyra MPA, causal effect probability >99% of an 84% reduction; 95% credible interval: -143%, -25%), and blue shark (Johnston MPAs, causal effect probability >95%) were significantly lower and longnose lancetfish significantly higher (Johnston MPAs, causal effect probability >95%) than predicted had the MPAs not been established, possibly from closing areas near shallow features, which aggregate pelagic predators, and from 'fishing-the-line'. There were no apparent causal impacts of the MPAs on species diversity, lengths and trophic level of the catch, perhaps because the MPAs were young, were too small, did not contain critical habitat for specific life-history stages, had been lightly exploited or experienced fishing-the-line. We also assessed model-standardized catch rates for species of conservation concern and mean trophic level of the catch within and outside of MPAs. Displaced effort produced multi-species conflicts: MPAs protect bycatch hotspots and hotspots of bycatch-to-target catch ratios for some at-risk species, but coldspots for others. Mean trophic level of the catch was significantly higher around MPAs, likely due to the aggregating effect of the shallow features and there having been light fishing pressure within MPAs. These findings demonstrate how exploring a wide range of ecological responses supports evidence-based evaluations of blue water MPAs.
first_indexed 2024-12-16T08:58:57Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b89049a55023477f8a15b3007515be03
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2025-03-14T12:57:28Z
publishDate 2020-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-b89049a55023477f8a15b3007515be032025-03-02T05:32:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01157e023512910.1371/journal.pone.0235129Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.Eric GilmanMilani ChaloupkaMark FitchettDanielle L CantrellMatt MerrifieldMarine protected areas (MPAs) can contribute to protecting biodiversity and managing ocean activities, including fishing. There is, however, limited evidence of ecological responses to blue water MPAs. We conducted the first comprehensive evaluation of impacts on fisheries production and ecological responses to pelagic MPAs of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument. A Bayesian time series-based counterfactual modelling approach using fishery-dependent data was used to compare the temporal response in the MPAs to three reference regions for standardized catch rates, lengths, trophic level of the catch and species diversity. Catch rates of bigeye tuna, the main target species (Kingman/Palmyra MPA, causal effect probability >99% of an 84% reduction; 95% credible interval: -143%, -25%), and blue shark (Johnston MPAs, causal effect probability >95%) were significantly lower and longnose lancetfish significantly higher (Johnston MPAs, causal effect probability >95%) than predicted had the MPAs not been established, possibly from closing areas near shallow features, which aggregate pelagic predators, and from 'fishing-the-line'. There were no apparent causal impacts of the MPAs on species diversity, lengths and trophic level of the catch, perhaps because the MPAs were young, were too small, did not contain critical habitat for specific life-history stages, had been lightly exploited or experienced fishing-the-line. We also assessed model-standardized catch rates for species of conservation concern and mean trophic level of the catch within and outside of MPAs. Displaced effort produced multi-species conflicts: MPAs protect bycatch hotspots and hotspots of bycatch-to-target catch ratios for some at-risk species, but coldspots for others. Mean trophic level of the catch was significantly higher around MPAs, likely due to the aggregating effect of the shallow features and there having been light fishing pressure within MPAs. These findings demonstrate how exploring a wide range of ecological responses supports evidence-based evaluations of blue water MPAs.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0235129&type=printable
spellingShingle Eric Gilman
Milani Chaloupka
Mark Fitchett
Danielle L Cantrell
Matt Merrifield
Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
PLoS ONE
title Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
title_full Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
title_fullStr Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
title_full_unstemmed Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
title_short Ecological responses to blue water MPAs.
title_sort ecological responses to blue water mpas
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0235129&type=printable
work_keys_str_mv AT ericgilman ecologicalresponsestobluewatermpas
AT milanichaloupka ecologicalresponsestobluewatermpas
AT markfitchett ecologicalresponsestobluewatermpas
AT daniellelcantrell ecologicalresponsestobluewatermpas
AT mattmerrifield ecologicalresponsestobluewatermpas