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Reviewing the Ecosystem Services, Societal Goods, and Benefits of Marine Protected Areas

Authors :
Willis, Trevor
Marcos, Concepción
Díaz, D.
Fietz, Katharina
Forcada, Aitor
Ford, A.
García-Charton, José Antonio
Goñi, Raquel
Lenfant, Philippe
Mallol, Sandra
Mouillot, David
Pérez-Marcos, M.
Puebla, O.
Manel, Stephanie
Pérez-Ruzafa, Ángel
Díaz Viñolas, David
Ford, Amanda
Pérez-Marcos, María
Puebla, Oscar
Willis, Trevor
Marcos, Concepción
Díaz, D.
Fietz, Katharina
Forcada, Aitor
Ford, A.
García-Charton, José Antonio
Goñi, Raquel
Lenfant, Philippe
Mallol, Sandra
Mouillot, David
Pérez-Marcos, M.
Puebla, O.
Manel, Stephanie
Pérez-Ruzafa, Ángel
Díaz Viñolas, David
Ford, Amanda
Pérez-Marcos, María
Puebla, Oscar
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Long-distance (>40-km) dispersal from marine reserves is poorly documented; yet, it can provide essential benefits such as seeding fished areas or connecting marine reserves into networks. From a meta-analysis, we suggest that the spatial scale of marine connectivity is underestimated due to the limited geographic extent of sampling designs. We also found that the largest marine reserves (>1000 km2) are the most isolated. These findings have important implications for the assessment of evolutionary, ecological, and socio-economic long-distance benefits of marine reserves. We conclude that existing methods to infer dispersal should consider the up-to-date genomic advances and also expand the spatial scale of sampling designs. Incorporating longdistance connectivity in conservation planning will contribute to increase the benefits of marine reserve networks.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1395205221
Document Type :
Electronic Resource