Long Distance Benefits of Marine Reserves Myth or Reality
Ver/ Abrir
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10508/15565Visitar enlace: https://hal-univ-perp.archives ...
Compartir
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es
Manel, S. (Stephanie); Loiseau, N.; Andrello, M. (Marco); Fietz, K. (Katharina); Goñi, R. (Raquel); Forcada, A. (Aitor); Lenfant, P. (Philippe); Kninmonth, S; Marcos, C. (Concepción); Marques, V.; Mallol, S. (Sandra); Pérez-Ruzafa, A. (Ángel); Breusing, C; Puebla, O; Mouillot, DFecha de publicación
2019Tipo
research articleResumen
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.
El ítem tiene asociados los siguientes ficheros de licencia: