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Optimal selection of marine protected areas based on connectivity and habitat quality

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  • Berglund, Moa
  • Nilsson Jacobi, Martin
  • Jonsson, Per R.

Abstract

Networks of nature reserves and protected areas are important instruments to protect biodiversity, including harvested populations. Selection of marine protected networks (MPA) will depend on both the connectivity of concerned species and the habitat quality of individual sites. We explore the relative effect of connectivity and habitat quality on solutions for optimal networks of MPA using eigenvalue perturbation theory and a metapopulation model. Based on analyses of both synthetic networks and realistic connectivities for a sessile invertebrate with planktonic larvae in the Baltic Sea, we show that connectivity is expected to be more efficient than habitat quality as a selection criterion for MPA networks with realistic probabilities of local recruitment. In a second series of analyses we explore the effect of temporal variability of connectivity on the selection of optimal MPA networks. We show that optimal solutions of MPA networks converged when based on 8–10 years of connectivity information, corresponding to the time scale of the North-Atlantic oscillation. In conclusion, this study indicates that connectivity may be more important than habitat quality as selection criterion for MPAs when targeting species with long-distance dispersal that is typical for many marine invertebrates and fish. Our study also shows that connectivity patterns may be relatively consistent in time which suggests that the recent progress in biophysical modelling can offer a framework for optimal selection of MPA networks based on connectivities, which should improve guidelines for the design of functional MPA networks.

Suggested Citation

  • Berglund, Moa & Nilsson Jacobi, Martin & Jonsson, Per R., 2012. "Optimal selection of marine protected areas based on connectivity and habitat quality," Ecological Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 240(C), pages 105-112.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:ecomod:v:240:y:2012:i:c:p:105-112
    DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.04.011
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Stephen E. Swearer & Jennifer E. Caselle & David W. Lea & Robert R. Warner, 1999. "Larval retention and recruitment in an island population of a coral-reef fish," Nature, Nature, vol. 402(6763), pages 799-802, December.
    2. Figueira, Will F., 2009. "Connectivity or demography: Defining sources and sinks in coral reef fish metapopulations," Ecological Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 220(8), pages 1126-1137.
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    Cited by:

    1. Levin, Mark (Левин, Марк) & Matrosova, K. (Матросова, К.), 2016. "Research, Modeling and Process Management Dissemination of Innovations in Socio-Economic Systems [Исследование, Моделирование И Управление Процессами Распространения Инноваций В Социально-Экономиче," Working Papers 1443, Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration.

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