Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Centre de Nouméa, B.P. A5, 98848 Nouméa, New-Caledonia.
Conserv Biol. 2010 Apr;24(2):541-52. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01394.x. Epub 2010 Jan 22.
Marine protected areas (MPAs) have been highlighted as a means toward effective conservation of coral reefs. New strategies are required to more effectively select MPA locations and increase the pace of their implementation. Many criteria exist to design MPA networks, but generally, it is recommended that networks conserve a diversity of species selected for, among other attributes, their representativeness, rarity, or endemicity. Because knowledge of species' spatial distribution remains scarce, efficient surrogates are urgently needed. We used five different levels of habitat maps and six spatial scales of analysis to identify under which circumstances habitat data used to design MPA networks for Wallis Island provided better representation of species than random choice alone. Protected-area site selections were derived from a rarity-complementarity algorithm. Habitat surrogacy was tested for commercial fish species, all fish species, commercially harvested invertebrates, corals, and algae species. Efficiency of habitat surrogacy varied by species group, type of habitat map, and spatial scale of analysis. Maps with the highest habitat thematic complexity provided better surrogates than simpler maps and were more robust to changes in spatial scales. Surrogates were most efficient for commercial fishes, corals, and algae but not for commercial invertebrates. Conversely, other measurements of species-habitat associations, such as richness congruence and composition similarities provided weak results. We provide, in part, a habitat-mapping methodology for designation of MPAs for Pacific Ocean islands that are characterized by habitat zonations similar to Wallis. Given the increasing availability and affordability of space-borne imagery to map habitats, our approach could appreciably facilitate and improve current approaches to coral reef conservation and enhance MPA implementation.
海洋保护区(MPAs)已被强调为保护珊瑚礁的有效手段。需要新的策略来更有效地选择 MPA 地点并加快其实施速度。有许多标准可以设计 MPA 网络,但通常建议网络应保护所选物种的多样性,这些物种是根据其代表性、稀有性或特有性等属性选择的。由于物种空间分布的知识仍然很少,因此迫切需要有效的替代物。我们使用了五个不同级别的生境图和六个分析尺度来确定在哪些情况下,用于设计瓦利斯岛 MPA 网络的生境数据比随机选择更能代表物种。保护区的选址是从稀有性互补算法中得出的。我们测试了生境替代物在商业鱼类、所有鱼类、商业捕捞无脊椎动物、珊瑚和藻类物种中的应用。生境替代物的效率因物种组、生境图类型和分析尺度而异。具有最高生境主题复杂性的地图比简单的地图提供了更好的替代物,并且对空间尺度的变化更稳健。替代物对商业鱼类、珊瑚和藻类最有效,但对商业无脊椎动物无效。相反,物种 - 生境关联的其他测量方法,如丰富度一致性和组成相似性,提供了较弱的结果。我们提供了部分用于太平洋岛屿 MPA 指定的生境制图方法,这些岛屿的生境具有类似于瓦利斯的分区。考虑到越来越多的可用和负担得起的卫星图像来绘制生境,我们的方法可以极大地促进和改进当前的珊瑚礁保护方法,并增强 MPA 的实施。