Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Science. 2021 Apr 2;372(6537):84-87. doi: 10.1126/science.abe6731.
Human activities and climate change threaten marine biodiversity worldwide, though sensitivity to these stressors varies considerably by species and taxonomic group. Mapping the spatial distribution of 14 anthropogenic stressors from 2003 to 2013 onto the ranges of 1271 at-risk marine species sensitive to them, we found that, on average, species faced potential impacts across 57% of their ranges, that this footprint expanded over time, and that the impacts intensified across 37% of their ranges. Although fishing activity dominated the footprint of impacts in national waters, climate stressors drove the expansion and intensification of impacts. Mitigating impacts on at-risk biodiversity is critical to supporting resilient marine ecosystems, and identifying the co-occurrence of impacts across multiple taxonomic groups highlights opportunities to amplify the benefits of conservation management.
人类活动和气候变化威胁着全球海洋生物多样性,尽管物种和分类群对这些压力源的敏感性有很大差异。我们将 2003 年至 2013 年期间的 14 个人类压力源的空间分布映射到 1271 种对其敏感的濒危海洋物种的分布范围内,发现平均而言,这些物种面临着其分布范围 57%的潜在影响,该范围随着时间的推移而扩大,并且其分布范围 37%的影响加剧。尽管渔业活动主导了国家水域内影响的范围,但气候压力源推动了影响的扩大和加剧。减轻对濒危生物多样性的影响对于支持有弹性的海洋生态系统至关重要,并且确定多个分类群的影响同时发生突出了扩大保护管理效益的机会。