Resilient reefs may exist, but can larval dispersal models find them?

In recent years, biophysical models have become a standard tool for investigating the effects of larval connectivity on marine ecology, evolution, and conservation [4–6]. Because their biophysical model predicts that a small number of reefs contribute disproportionately to the GBR’s persistence and...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS biology 2018-08, Vol.16 (8), p.e2005964-e2005964
Hauptverfasser: Bode, Michael, Bode, Lance, Choukroun, Severine, James, Maurice K, Mason, Luciano B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In recent years, biophysical models have become a standard tool for investigating the effects of larval connectivity on marine ecology, evolution, and conservation [4–6]. Because their biophysical model predicts that a small number of reefs contribute disproportionately to the GBR’s persistence and resilience, Hock and colleagues claim that these reefs should be a primary focus of management resources. Overall, only 32% of the key sources prioritised by our alternative model were also highlighted by Hock and colleagues. [...]a substantial proportion (19%) of the key sources identified in [2] are among the worst reefs according to the alternative model, consistently delivering the lowest performance according to all five criteria. Researchers are increasingly using biophysical larval dispersal models to identify priorities at very fine spatial scales [9,10]; we ourselves have not been immune to this temptation [5,11]. Since managers are likely to continue to seek guidance at the scale of individual reefs—this is a common size for marine reserves, for example—it is important that any such recommendations come with strong caveats. [...]future research should aim to better understand the relationship between biophysical model uncertainty and spatial scale.
ISSN:1545-7885
1544-9173
1545-7885
DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.2005964