首页|External fishing effort regulates positive effects of no-take marine protected areas

External fishing effort regulates positive effects of no-take marine protected areas

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? 2022 The Author(s)Marine protected areas (MPAs) have been established across the globe to mitigate the effects of multiple stressors on marine communities. In many locations, MPAs have generated positive effects on fish communities, but the impacts of fishing pressure—the primary stressor MPAs seek to manage—have not been well investigated. We examined changes in fish biomass inside and outside of no-take MPAs over 14 years in central California, USA. Using data from the community-based science program, the California Collaborative Fisheries Research Program, we tested which environmental and human-induced stressors most influence the strength of MPA responses. While temperature and productivity were included in the best fit model, we found that fine-scale fishing effort data, following reserve implementation, best explained the spatial variation in fish community responses to MPAs. Specifically, differences in fish biomass between MPAs and sites open to fishing were larger for reserves near heavily fished locations and these areas exhibited the highest rate of change in fish biomass, indicating strong positive effects of the MPA on the most heavily exploited fish communities. As MPAs continue to be used as a prominent conservation strategy in coastal systems, managers should consider both the suite of human-induced (socio-ecological interactions) and environmental conditions that may alter MPA success as well as establish long-term monitoring programs to fully assess the functionality of marine reserves into the future.

Anthropogenic stressorsCommunity-based scienceEnvironmental conditionsFisheriesMarine reservesSocio-ecological interactions

Ziegler S.L.、Brooks R.O.、Hamilton S.L.、Chiu J.A.、Ruttenberg B.I.、Waltz G.T.、Wendt D.E.、Fields R.T.、Shen C.、Starr R.M.

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Moss Landing Marine Laboratories San Jose State University

Center for Coastal Marine Sciences Biological Sciences Department California Polytechnic State University

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Resources Program

Marine Protected Areas Management Project California Department of Fish and Wildlife

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2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.269
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