Connectivity modelling of areas closed to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems in the northwest Atlantic

Este artículo contiene 19 páginas, 7 tablas, 12 figuras. Over the course of the past decade, in response to United Nations General Assembly resolutions calling for the protection of vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs), the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization has closed 14 areas around the high...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers
Main Authors: Kenchington, Ellen L. R., Wang, Zeliang, Lirette, Camille, Murillo, Francisco Javier, Guijarro, Javier, Yashayaev, Igor, Maldonado, Manuel
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/173043
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Summary:Este artículo contiene 19 páginas, 7 tablas, 12 figuras. Over the course of the past decade, in response to United Nations General Assembly resolutions calling for the protection of vulnerable marine ecosystems (VMEs), the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization has closed 14 areas around the high-seas portion of Grand Bank and Flemish Cap to protect deep-sea coral and sponge habitats from impacts by bottom-contact fishing gears. Structural and functional connectivity for those areas were not explicitly considered in the area-selection process. We applied a particle-tracking model in each of four seasons to produce dispersal trajectories at the surface and 100m from start points within the closed areas. These were run in forecast and hindcast modes to identify dispersal kernels. Currents at the surface, 100 m, 1000m and “on bottom” were examined under an independent model (NEMO) to infer structural connectivity among the areas at relevant depths not available in the particle-tracking model. Spawning times and planktonic larval duration of the dominant sponges, sea pens and gorgonian corals were then considered to evaluate the trajectories as biophysical models, while species distribution models identified potential source populations from hindcast projections. Five of the 14 areas, including the three largest closures, showed particle retention, with three others showing retention within 10 km of their boundaries. The regional pattern of currents and their topographic forcing emerged as a strong structuring agent. A system of weakly-connected closed areas to protect sea pen VMEs on Flemish Cap was identified. The conducted approach illustrates the added value of assessing/modelling networking properties when designing MPAs. This work was supported by Fisheries and Oceans, Canada's International Governance Strategy, awarded to EK; this work is a Canadian and Spanish CSIC contribution to the SponGES project - part of the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement ...