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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Protection from direct human impacts can safeguard marine life, yet ocean
warming crosses marine protected area boundaries. Here, we test whether
protection offers resilience to marine heatwaves from local to network scales.
We examine 71,269 timeseries of population abundances for 2269 reef fish
species surveyed in 357 protected versus 747 open sites worldwide. We
quantify the stability of reef fish abundance from populations to metacommunities, considering responses of species and functional diversity
including thermal affinity of different trophic groups. Overall, protection
mitigates adverse effects of marine heatwaves on fish abundance, community
stability, asynchronous fluctuations and functional richness. We find that local
stability is positively related to distance from centers of high human density
only in protected areas. We provide evidence that networks of protected areas
have persistent reef fish communities in warming oceans by maintaining large
populations and promoting stability at different levels of biological
organization.
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Keywords
Citation
Benedetti-Cecchi, L., Bulleri, F., Bates, A. E., Strona, G., Horta e Costa, B., Edgar, G. J., Stuart-Smith, R. D., Barrett, N. S., Hereu, B., Reed, D. C., Kushner, D. J., Emslie, M. J., García-Charton, J. A., Gonçalves, E. J., & Aspillaga, E. (2024). Marine protected areas promote stability of reef fish communities under climate warming. Nature Communications, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44976-y
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group