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</script>Protecting connectivity promotes successful biodiversity and fisheries conservation
pmid: 35050678
The global decline of coral reefs has led to calls for strategies that reconcile biodiversity conservation and fisheries benefits. Still, considerable gaps in our understanding of the spatial ecology of ecosystem services remain. We combined spatial information on larval dispersal networks and estimates of human pressure to test the importance of connectivity for ecosystem service provision. We found that reefs receiving larvae from highly connected dispersal corridors were associated with high fish species richness. Generally, larval “sinks” contained twice as much fish biomass as “sources” and exhibited greater resilience to human pressure when protected. Despite their potential to support biodiversity persistence and sustainable fisheries, up to 70% of important dispersal corridors, sinks, and source reefs remain unprotected, emphasizing the need for increased protection of networks of well-connected reefs.
- University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant United States
- Australian Institute of Marine Science Australia
- Wildlife Conservation Society United States
- University of Western Australia Australia
- Charles Darwin University Australia
570, Conservation of Natural Resources, Models, Statistical, GEOCHEM PHYS, Coral Reefs, Fisheries, Fishes, Bayes Theorem, Biodiversity, ECOLOGY, 333, [SDU] Sciences of the Universe [physics], [SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics], Animals, Humans, Biomass, Animal Distribution, Ecosystem
570, Conservation of Natural Resources, Models, Statistical, GEOCHEM PHYS, Coral Reefs, Fisheries, Fishes, Bayes Theorem, Biodiversity, ECOLOGY, 333, [SDU] Sciences of the Universe [physics], [SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics], Animals, Humans, Biomass, Animal Distribution, Ecosystem
