School of Biological Sciences and Environment Institute, University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
School of Biological Sciences and Environment Institute, University of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia; Government of South Australia Department for Environment and Water, Adelaide, South Australia 5000, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Aug 1;780:146401. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146401. Epub 2021 Mar 19.
Human activities put stress on our oceans and with a growing global population, the impact is increasing. Stressors rarely act in isolation, with the majority of marine areas being impacted by multiple, concurrent stressors. Marine spatial cumulative impact assessments attempt to estimate the collective impact of multiple stressors on marine environments. However, this is difficult given how stressors interact with one another, and the variable response of ecosystems. As a result, assumptions and generalisations are required when attempting to model cumulative impacts. One fundamental assumption of the most commonly applied, semi-quantitative cumulative impact assessment method is that a change in modelled cumulative impact is correlated with a change in ecosystem condition. However, this assumption has rarely been validated with empirical data. We tested this assumption using a case study of seagrass in a large, inverse estuary in South Australia (Spencer Gulf). We compared three different seagrass condition indices, based on survey data collected in the field, to scores from a spatial cumulative impact model for the study area. One condition index showed no relationship with cumulative impact, whilst the other two indices had very small, negative relationships with cumulative impact. These results suggest that one of the most commonly used methods for assessing cumulative impacts on marine systems is not robust enough to accurately reflect the effect of multiple stressors on seagrasses; possibly due to the number and generality of assumptions involved in the approach. Future methods should acknowledge the complex relationships between stressors, and the impact these relationships can have on ecosystems. This outcome highlights the need for greater evaluation of cumulative impact assessment outputs and the need for data-driven approaches. Our results are a caution for marine scientists and resource managers who may rely on spatial cumulative impact assessment outputs for informing policy and decision-making.
人类活动给海洋带来了压力,而随着全球人口的增长,这种影响正在加剧。压力源很少单独起作用,大多数海洋区域都受到多种同时存在的压力源的影响。海洋空间累积影响评估试图估计多种压力源对海洋环境的综合影响。然而,由于压力源之间相互作用以及生态系统的可变响应,这是困难的。因此,在尝试对累积影响进行建模时需要做出假设和概括。最常用的半定量累积影响评估方法的一个基本假设是,模型化的累积影响的变化与生态系统状况的变化相关。然而,这一假设很少用经验数据验证。我们使用南澳大利亚(斯宾塞湾)大型反向河口的海草案例研究来检验这一假设。我们将三种基于实地调查数据的不同海草状况指数与研究区域的空间累积影响模型的分数进行了比较。一个状况指数与累积影响没有关系,而另外两个指数与累积影响的关系非常小且为负。这些结果表明,评估海洋系统累积影响最常用的方法之一不够稳健,无法准确反映多种压力源对海草的影响;这可能是由于该方法涉及的假设数量和通用性。未来的方法应该承认压力源之间的复杂关系,以及这些关系对生态系统的影响。这一结果凸显了对累积影响评估结果进行更多评估的必要性,以及对数据驱动方法的需求。我们的研究结果提醒那些可能依赖空间累积影响评估结果来为政策和决策提供信息的海洋科学家和资源管理者,需要谨慎对待。