| Literature DB >> 28851885 |
T E Davies1,2, S M Maxwell3, K Kaschner4, C Garilao5, N C Ban6.
Abstract
Large marine protected areas (>30,000 km2) have a high profile in marine conservation, yet their contribution to conservation is contested. Assessing the overlap of large marine protected areas with 14,172 species, we found large marine protected areas cover 4.4% of the ocean and at least some portion of the range of 83.3% of the species assessed. Of all species within large marine protected areas, 26.9% had at least 10% of their range represented, and this was projected to increase to 40.1% in 2100. Cumulative impacts were significantly higher within large marine protected areas than outside, refuting the critique that they only occur in pristine areas. We recommend future large marine protected areas be sited based on systematic conservation planning practices where possible and include areas beyond national jurisdiction, and provide five key recommendations to improve the long-term representation of all species to meet critical global policy goals (e.g., Convention on Biological Diversity's Aichi Targets).Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28851885 PMCID: PMC5574922 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-08758-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map of all large marine protected areas used in this study. Blue areas indicate designated large marine protected areas (those with a legal boundary, as of December 2015) and are numbered; orange areas indicate proposed large marine protected areas and the number is preceded with a ‘P’ (n = 2). Full names of the large marine protected areas are in Supplementary Table 1. Figure created using ArcGIS v.10.3.1 http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/.
Figure 2The percentage of species’ ranges represented in large marine protected areas for current and future distributions (year 2100). The violin plots show the percentage of species that do not meet (light blue), or meet or exceed (dark blue) 10% protection (red dotted line). Data are shown for all species found within designated large marine protected areas (all), for the five largest phyla (A); and for Chordata by its six largest classes (B). The light gray dashed lines indicate how these distributions would change with the addition of two networks of proposed Antarctic large marine protected areas. Figure created by Terra Communications https://terracommunications.org/.
Figure 3Percentage of species projected to gain (winners = green), or lose (losers = blue) representation of their range in LMPAs, under a climate change scenario by 2100. Data are shown for all species found within designated LMPAs (All), for the five largest phyla, with Chordata split by its six largest classes.