High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea

Knowledge of the spatial distribution of species and habitats is crucial for effective management of marine resources. Data to support informed decision-making in the deep sea are often sparse or absent, as offshore sampling surveys are expensive, time-consuming, have limited coverage and are spatia...

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Main Author: Rengstorf, Anna Maria
Other Authors: Grehan, Anthony, Brown, Colin, Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources National Geoscience Programme 2007-2013 (Griffith Geoscience post-graduate fellowship)
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3694
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spelling ftnuigalway:oai:aran.library.nuigalway.ie/:10379/3694 2023-06-11T04:13:52+02:00 High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea Rengstorf, Anna Maria Grehan, Anthony Brown, Colin Department of Communications Energy and Natural Resources National Geoscience Programme 2007-2013 (Griffith Geoscience post-graduate fellowship) 2013-02-15 http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3694 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3694 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/ Lophelia pertusa Cold-water corals Predictive modelling Deep sea Ecosystem-based management Habitat suitability modelling Maxent Earth and Ocean Sciences Thesis 2013 ftnuigalway 2023-05-28T18:03:38Z Knowledge of the spatial distribution of species and habitats is crucial for effective management of marine resources. Data to support informed decision-making in the deep sea are often sparse or absent, as offshore sampling surveys are expensive, time-consuming, have limited coverage and are spatially biased. Habitat suitability models (HSMs) make use of the limited data available and are being applied increasingly to create continuous coverage maps of the potential distribution of species or habitats. Such maps have value as decision support tools for future survey planning, design of marine protected area networks and ultimately the implementation of marine spatial planning. In the deep sea, the quality of these maps is sub-optimal because of 1) the frequent lack of high-resolution ecologically relevant environmental variables, 2) species distribution data arising from opportunistic, spatially biased sampling, and 3) a lack of reliable species absence data. Therefore, this thesis has as its primary objective the development of repeatable and robust methods for deep-sea benthic HSM that take into account these issues. Based on the case study of predicting suitable habitat for the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus 1758) in the north-east Atlantic, this thesis extends existing benthic HSM methodologies by 1) maximising the resolution and information content of environmental variables, 2) optimising the reliability of presence-only modelling methods, 3) investigating the predictive power of high-resolution environmental variables derived from 3D hydrodynamic models, 4) assessing the use of quantitative species occurrence proportion data for calibrating models, and 5) exploring the applicability of mixed models to account for spatially grouped transect data. The key outcome is the first reliable high-resolution HSM for Lophelia pertusa reef habitat as a tool for ecosystem-based management in Irish waters. The implications of HSMs for conservation, marine spatial planning and an understanding of ecosystem ... Thesis Lophelia pertusa North East Atlantic National University of Ireland (NUI), Galway: ARAN
institution Open Polar
collection National University of Ireland (NUI), Galway: ARAN
op_collection_id ftnuigalway
language unknown
topic Lophelia pertusa
Cold-water corals
Predictive modelling
Deep sea
Ecosystem-based management
Habitat suitability modelling
Maxent
Earth and Ocean Sciences
spellingShingle Lophelia pertusa
Cold-water corals
Predictive modelling
Deep sea
Ecosystem-based management
Habitat suitability modelling
Maxent
Earth and Ocean Sciences
Rengstorf, Anna Maria
High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
topic_facet Lophelia pertusa
Cold-water corals
Predictive modelling
Deep sea
Ecosystem-based management
Habitat suitability modelling
Maxent
Earth and Ocean Sciences
description Knowledge of the spatial distribution of species and habitats is crucial for effective management of marine resources. Data to support informed decision-making in the deep sea are often sparse or absent, as offshore sampling surveys are expensive, time-consuming, have limited coverage and are spatially biased. Habitat suitability models (HSMs) make use of the limited data available and are being applied increasingly to create continuous coverage maps of the potential distribution of species or habitats. Such maps have value as decision support tools for future survey planning, design of marine protected area networks and ultimately the implementation of marine spatial planning. In the deep sea, the quality of these maps is sub-optimal because of 1) the frequent lack of high-resolution ecologically relevant environmental variables, 2) species distribution data arising from opportunistic, spatially biased sampling, and 3) a lack of reliable species absence data. Therefore, this thesis has as its primary objective the development of repeatable and robust methods for deep-sea benthic HSM that take into account these issues. Based on the case study of predicting suitable habitat for the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus 1758) in the north-east Atlantic, this thesis extends existing benthic HSM methodologies by 1) maximising the resolution and information content of environmental variables, 2) optimising the reliability of presence-only modelling methods, 3) investigating the predictive power of high-resolution environmental variables derived from 3D hydrodynamic models, 4) assessing the use of quantitative species occurrence proportion data for calibrating models, and 5) exploring the applicability of mixed models to account for spatially grouped transect data. The key outcome is the first reliable high-resolution HSM for Lophelia pertusa reef habitat as a tool for ecosystem-based management in Irish waters. The implications of HSMs for conservation, marine spatial planning and an understanding of ecosystem ...
author2 Grehan, Anthony
Brown, Colin
Department of Communications
Energy and Natural Resources National Geoscience Programme 2007-2013 (Griffith Geoscience post-graduate fellowship)
format Thesis
author Rengstorf, Anna Maria
author_facet Rengstorf, Anna Maria
author_sort Rengstorf, Anna Maria
title High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
title_short High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
title_full High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
title_fullStr High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
title_full_unstemmed High-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
title_sort high-resolution habitat suitability modelling of vulnerable marine ecosystems in the deep sea
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3694
genre Lophelia pertusa
North East Atlantic
genre_facet Lophelia pertusa
North East Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10379/3694
op_rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Ireland
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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