4.1 Article

No evidence of increased demersal fish abundance six years after creation of marine protected areas along the southeast United States Atlantic coast

Journal

BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 92, Issue 4, Pages 447-471

Publisher

ROSENSTIEL SCH MAR ATMOS SCI
DOI: 10.5343/bms.2016.1053

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NOAA Undersea Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington
  2. Underwater Vehicles Program at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington
  3. NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration [NA16RP2697, NA04OAR4600055, A06OAR4600095]
  4. NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program
  5. South Atlantic Fishery Management Council
  6. Marine Fisheries Initiative [FY14 IN HOUSE 002]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Marine protected areas (MPAs) have been used widely as a conservation and fisheries management tool to protect fish and habitats. We used a time series (20012014) of underwater videos from submersibles and remotely operated vehicles to determine whether a series of MPAs established in early 2009 along the southeast United States Atlantic coast has increased the number of fish species, density of fished species, or the density of Rhomboplites aurorubens (Cuvier, 1829) compared to adjacent, non-reserve areas. We used univariate and multivariate approaches at two spatial scales (region-wide and MPA-specific) to test for a change in the number or density of fish species inside compared to outside MPAs. Overall, 185 fish taxa were observed from 1021 video transects across all years of the study. We did not observe a higher number of species, density of fished species, or density of R. aurorubens inside compared to outside MPAs, either after region-wide standardization using generalized additive models or for nominal analyses focusing on two (Edisto or North Florida) MPAs. Using non metric multidimensional scaling and analysis of similarity, we did not observe any change in community structure occurring inside the MPAs that was not simultaneously occurring outside the MPAs, both at the region-wide or MPA-level scale. We did not detect unique changes to the fish community inside MPAs after their creation, which could be due to low statistical power, not enough data post-MPA creation, low compliance rates, or suboptimal MPA shape and size, or some combination thereof. Given their current relatively low abundances, the sampling effort required to effectively assess potential MPA effects for most grouper species is well beyond current or historical levels of sampling.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available