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Mcclanahan, Tim R.; Schroeder, Robert E.; Friedlander, Alan M.; Vigliola, Laurent; Wantiez, Laurent; Caselle, Jennifer E.; Graham, Nicholas A. J.; Wilson, Shaun; Edgar, Graham J.; Stuart-smith, Rick D.; Oddenyo, Remy M.; Cinner, J. E.. |
Baselines and benchmarks (B&Bs) are needed to evaluate the ecological status and fisheries potential of coral reefs. B&Bs may depend on habitat features and energetic limitations that constrain biomass within the natural variability of the environment and fish behaviors. To evaluate if broad B&Bs exist, we compiled data on the biomass of fishes in similar to 1000 reefs with no recent history of fishing in 19 ecoregions. These reefs spanned the full longitude and latitude of Indian and Pacific Ocean reefs and included older high-compliance fisheries closures (>15 yr closure) and remote reef areas (>9 h travel time from fisheries markets). There was no significant change in biomass over the 15 to 48 yr closure period but closures had only... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Baselines; Coral reef fish; Fisheries and ecological indicators; Pristine or virgin biomass; Sustainability. |
Ano: 2019 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00589/70064/68028.pdf |
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Macneil, M. Aaron; Chapman, Demian D.; Heupel, Michelle; Simpfendorfer, Colin A.; Heithaus, Michael; Meekan, Mark; Harvey, Euan; Goetze, Jordan; Kiszka, Jeremy; Bond, Mark E.; Currey-randall, Leanne M.; Speed, Conrad W.; Sherman, C. Samantha; Rees, Matthew J.; Udyawer, Vinay; Flowers, Kathryn I.; Clementi, Gina; Valentin-albanese, Jasmine; Gorham, Taylor; Adam, M. Shiham; Ali, Khadeeja; Pina-amargos, Fabian; Angulo-valdes, Jorge A.; Asher, Jacob; Barcia, Laura Garcia; Beaufort, Oceane; Benjamin, Cecilie; Bernard, Anthony T. F.; Berumen, Michael L.; Bierwagen, Stacy; Bonnema, Erika; Bown, Rosalind M. K.; Bradley, Darcey; Brooks, Edd; Brown, J. Jed; Buddo, Dayne; Burke, Patrick; Caceres, Camila; Cardenosa, Diego; Carrier, Jeffrey C.; Caselle, Jennifer E.; Charloo, Venkatesh; Claverie, Thomas; Clua, Eric; Cochran, Jesse E. M.; Cook, Neil; Cramp, Jessica; D'Alberto, Brooke; De Graaf, Martin; Dornhege, Mareike; Estep, Andy; Fanovich, Lanya; Farabough, Naomi F.; Fernando, Daniel; Flam, Anna L.; Floros, Camilla; Fourqurean, Virginia; Garla, Ricardo; Gastrich, Kirk; George, Lachlan; Graham, Rory; Guttridge, Tristan; Hardenstine, Royale S.; Heck, Stephen; Henderson, Aaron C.; Hertler, Heidi; Hueter, Robert; Johnson, Mohini; Jupiter, Stacy; Kasana, Devanshi; Kessel, Steven T.; Kiilu, Benedict; Kirata, Taratu; Kuguru, Baraka; Kyne, Fabian; Langlois, Tim; Ledee, Elodie J. I.; Lindfield, Steve; Luna-acosta, Andrea; Maggs, Jade; Manjaji-matsumoto, B. Mabel; Marshall, Andrea; Matich, Philip; Mccombs, Erin; Mclean, Dianne; Meggs, Llewelyn; Moore, Stephen; Mukherji, Sushmita; Murray, Ryan; Kaimuddin, Muslimin; Newman, Stephen J.; Nogues, Josep; Obota, Clay; O'Shea, Owen; Osuka, Kennedy; Papastamatiou, Yannis P.; Perera, Nishan; Peterson, Bradley; Ponzo, Alessandro; Prasetyo, Andhika; Quamar, L. M. Sjamsul; Quinlan, Jessica; Ruiz-abierno, Alexei; Sala, Enric; Samoilys, Melita; Scharer-umpierre, Michelle; Schlaff, Audrey; Simpson, Nikola; Smith, Adam N. H.; Sparks, Lauren; Tanna, Akshay; Torres, Ruben; Travers, Marie-agnes; Van Zinnicq Bergmann, Maurits; Vigliola, Laurent; Ward, Juney; Watts, Alexandra M.; Wen, Colin; Whitman, Elizabeth; Wirsing, Aaron J.; Wothke, Aljoscha; Zarza-gonzalez, Esteban; Cinner, Joshua E.. |
Decades of overexploitation have devastated shark populations, leaving considerable doubt as to their ecological status1,2. Yet much of what is known about sharks has been inferred from catch records in industrial fisheries, whereas far less information is available about sharks that live in coastal habitats3. Here we address this knowledge gap using data from more than 15,000 standardized baited remote underwater video stations that were deployed on 371 reefs in 58 nations to estimate the conservation status of reef sharks globally. Our results reveal the profound impact that fishing has had on reef shark populations: we observed no sharks on almost 20% of the surveyed reefs. Reef sharks were almost completely absent from reefs in several nations, and... |
Tipo: Text |
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Ano: 2020 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00644/75627/83233.pdf |
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