Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.65 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Marine Spatial Planning (MSP) is becoming a key management approach throughout the world. The process
includes the mapping of how humans and wildlife use the marine environment to inform the development of
management measures. An integrated multi-species approach to identifying key areas is important for MSP
because it allows managers a global representation of an area, enabling them to see where management can have
the most impact for biodiversity protection. However, multi-species analysis remains challenging. This paper
presents a methodological framework for mapping key areas for marine megafauna (seabirds, pinnipeds, cetaceans)
by incorporating different data types across multiple species. The framework includes analyses of tracking
data and observation survey data, applying analytical steps according to the type of data available during each
year quarter for each species. It produces core-use area layers at the species level, then combines these layers to
create megafauna core-use area layers. The framework was applied in the Falkland Islands. The study gathered
over 750,000 tracking and at-sea observation locations covering an equivalent of 5495 data days between 1998
and 2015 for 36 species. The framework provides a step-by-step implementation protocol, replicable across
geographic scales and transferable to multiple taxa. R scripts are provided. Common repositories, such as the
Birdlife International Tracking Database, are invaluable tools, providing a secure platform for storing and accessing
spatial data to apply the methodological framework. This provides managers with data necessary to
enhance MSP efforts and marine conservation worldwide.
Description
Keywords
Marine conservation MSP Patagonian Shelf Seabirds Seals South Atlantic Tracking data
Citation
Marine Policy, 92, 61-72. Doi: 10.1016/j.marpol.2018.02.017
Publisher
Elsevier