Transferable, predictive models of benthic communities informs marine spatial planning in a remote and data-poor region

Bridge, Tom C.L., Huang, Zhi, Przeslawski, Rachel, Tran, Maggie, Siwabessy, Justy, Picard, Kim, Reside, April E., Logan, Murray, Nichol, Scott L., & (2020) Transferable, predictive models of benthic communities informs marine spatial planning in a remote and data-poor region. Conservation Science and Practice, 2(9), Article number: e251.

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Systematic conservation planning requires spatial information on biodiversity. Such information is often unavailable, forcing spatial planning to rely on assumed relationships between species and environmental features. This problem is particularly acute in large, remote marine protected areas that are proliferating rapidly. Here, we use models to predict whether (a) macrobenthic biodiversity across four taxa (gorgonians, soft corals, hard corals, and sponges) with different life histories are congruent within seascape features through regional space; and (b) models generated in an intensively-sampled area in one region can predict the occurrence of habitat-forming macrobenthos in neighboring ones. All four taxa studied showed similar habitat preferences, but high variability in distributions among and within features suggesting factors other than simple geomorphology influence these regional biodiversity patterns. Nonetheless, models derived from one region accurately predicted the presence and absence of the same taxa hundreds of kilometers away. This transferability of models of species occurrences has the potential to deliver improved reserve design in data-deficient regions.

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5 citations in Scopus
6 citations in Web of Science®
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ID Code: 229788
Item Type: Contribution to Journal (Journal Article)
Refereed: Yes
Additional Information: Funding Information: Australian Research Council; National Environmental Research Program (NERP) Marine Biodiversity Hub Funding information. We thank A. Heyward, M. Stowar, J. Colquhoun, B. Radford, M. Case, and C. Moore for their assistance with field trip planning and execution and data analyses. We are grateful to the scientific and ship crews of the R.V. Solander during field surveys. This work was undertaken as part of the Marine Biodiversity Hub, a collaborative partnership supported through funding from the Australian Government's National Environmental Research Program (NERP), with additional funding support from the Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award fellowship DE180100746 to T. Bridge. Published with permission of the Chief Executive Officer, Geoscience Australia.
Measurements or Duration: 12 pages
DOI: 10.1111/csp2.251
ISSN: 2578-4854
Pure ID: 108281039
Divisions: Past > QUT Faculties & Divisions > Science & Engineering Faculty
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Funding Information: Australian Research Council; National Environmental Research Program (NERP) Marine Biodiversity Hub Funding information We thank A. Heyward, M. Stowar, J. Colquhoun, B. Radford, M. Case, and C. Moore for their assistance with field trip planning and execution and data analyses. We are grateful to the scientific and ship crews of the R.V. Solander during field surveys. This work was undertaken as part of the Marine Biodiversity Hub, a collaborative partnership supported through funding from the Australian Government's National Environmental Research Program (NERP), with additional funding support from the Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award fellowship DE180100746 to T. Bridge. Published with permission of the Chief Executive Officer, Geoscience Australia.
Copyright Owner: 2020 The Author(s)
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Deposited On: 14 Apr 2022 05:53
Last Modified: 01 Mar 2024 18:21