FRB-CESAB, Montpellier, France.
Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, London, UK.
Conserv Biol. 2023 Jun;37(3):e14043. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14043. Epub 2023 Feb 9.
Many species are restricted to a marginal or suboptimal fraction of their historical range due to anthropogenic impacts, making it hard to interpret their ecological preferences from modern-day data alone. However, inferring past ecological states is limited by the availability of robust data and biases in historical archives, posing a challenge for policy makers . To highlight how historical records can be used to understand the ecological requirements of threatened species and inform conservation, we investigated sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) distribution in the Western Indian Ocean. We assessed differences in information content and habitat suitability predictions based on whale occurrence data from Yankee whaling logs (1792-1912) and from modern cetacean surveys (1995-2020). We built maximum entropy habitat suitability models containing static (bathymetry-derived) variables to compare models comprising historical-only and modern-only data. Using both historical and modern habitat suitability predictions we assessed marine protected area (MPA) placement by contrasting suitability in- and outside MPAs. The historical model predicted high habitat suitability in shelf and coastal regions near continents and islands, whereas the modern model predicted a less coastal distribution with high habitat suitability more restricted to areas of steep topography. The proportion of high habitat suitability inside versus outside MPAs was higher when applying the historical predictions than the modern predictions, suggesting that different marine spatial planning optimums can be reached from either data sources. Moreover, differences in relative habitat suitability predictions between eras were consistent with the historical depletion of sperm whales from coastal regions, which were easily accessed and targeted by whalers, resulting in a modern distribution limited more to steep continental margins and remote oceanic ridges. The use of historical data can provide important new insights and, through cautious interpretation, inform conservation planning and policy, for example, by identifying refugee species and regions of anticipated population recovery.
由于人为影响,许多物种的分布范围局限在其历史范围的边缘或次优部分,因此仅从现代数据很难推断它们的生态偏好。然而,过去生态状态的推断受到可用数据的限制以及历史档案中的偏差,这给决策者带来了挑战。为了强调历史记录如何用于了解受威胁物种的生态需求并为保护提供信息,我们调查了西印度洋抹香鲸(Physeter macrocephalus)的分布情况。我们评估了基于 Yankee 捕鲸日志(1792-1912 年)和现代鲸目动物调查(1995-2020 年)中的鲸鱼出现数据的信息含量和栖息地适宜性预测的差异。我们构建了最大熵栖息地适宜性模型,其中包含静态(基于测深的)变量,以比较仅包含历史数据和仅包含现代数据的模型。使用历史和现代栖息地适宜性预测,我们通过对比保护区内和保护区外的适宜性来评估海洋保护区(MPA)的位置。历史模型预测大陆和岛屿附近的陆架和沿海地区具有高栖息地适宜性,而现代模型预测的分布范围较不沿海,高栖息地适宜性更局限于地形陡峭的区域。应用历史预测时,保护区内与保护区外的高栖息地适宜性比例高于应用现代预测时,这表明可以从两种数据源达到不同的海洋空间规划最佳状态。此外,两个时期的相对栖息地适宜性预测差异与抹香鲸从沿海地区大量减少的情况一致,沿海地区很容易被捕鲸者接近和瞄准,导致现代分布更多地局限于陡峭的大陆边缘和偏远的大洋脊。历史数据的使用可以提供重要的新见解,并通过谨慎解释,为保护规划和政策提供信息,例如,确定避难物种和预期人口恢复的区域。