Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea

Delineating protected areas for sensitive species is a growing challenge as changing climate alters the geographic pattern of habitats as well as human responses to those shifts. When human impacts are expected within projected ranges of threatened species, there is often demand to demarcate the min...

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Main Authors: Lovvorn, James R, Grebmeier, Jacqueline M, Cooper, Lee W., Bump, Joseph K., Richman, Samantha E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: OpenSIUC 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/zool_pubs/21
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=zool_pubs
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spelling ftsilluniv:oai:opensiuc.lib.siu.edu:zool_pubs-1018 2023-05-15T15:43:45+02:00 Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea Lovvorn, James R Grebmeier, Jacqueline M Cooper, Lee W. Bump, Joseph K. Richman, Samantha E. 2009-09-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/zool_pubs/21 https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=zool_pubs unknown OpenSIUC https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/zool_pubs/21 https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=zool_pubs Publications climate change Endangered Species Act energetics models individual-based models Macoma calcarea marine reserves Nuculana radiata sea-ice effects on birds Somateria fischeri spatial foraging models Spectacled Eider trawling effects text 2009 ftsilluniv 2021-10-01T06:49:09Z Delineating protected areas for sensitive species is a growing challenge as changing climate alters the geographic pattern of habitats as well as human responses to those shifts. When human impacts are expected within projected ranges of threatened species, there is often demand to demarcate the minimum habitat required to ensure the species' persistence. Because diminished or wide-ranging populations may not occupy all viable (and needed) habitat at once, one must identify thresholds of resources that will support the species even in unoccupied areas. Long-term data on the shifting mosaic of critical resources may indicate ranges of future variability. We addressed these issues for the Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri), a federally threatened species that winters in pack ice of the Bering Sea. Changing climate has decreased ice cover and severely reduced the eiders' benthic prey and has increased prospects for expansion of bottom trawling that may further affect prey communities. To assess long-term changes in habitats that will support eiders, we linked data on benthic prey, sea ice, and weather from 1970 to 2001 with a spatially explicit simulation model of eider energy balance that integrated field, laboratory, and remote-sensing studies. Areas estimated to have prey densities adequate for eiders in 1970–1974 did not include most areas that were viable 20 years later (1993–1994). Unless the entire area with adequate prey in 1993–1994 had been protected, the much reduced viable area in 1999–2001 might well have been excluded. During long non-foraging periods (as at night), eiders can save much energy by resting on ice vs. floating on water; thus, loss of ice cover in the future might substantially decrease the area in which prey densities are adequate to offset the eiders' energy needs. For wide-ranging benthivores such as eiders, our results emphasize that fixed protected areas based on current conditions can be too small or inflexible to subsume long-term shifts in habitat conditions. Better knowledge of patterns of natural disturbance experienced by prey communities, and appropriate allocation of human disturbance over seasons or years, may yield alternative strategies to large-scale closures that may be politically and economically problematic Text Bering Sea Sea ice Southern Illinois University Carbondale: OpenSUIC Bering Sea
institution Open Polar
collection Southern Illinois University Carbondale: OpenSUIC
op_collection_id ftsilluniv
language unknown
topic climate change
Endangered Species Act
energetics models
individual-based models
Macoma calcarea
marine reserves
Nuculana radiata
sea-ice effects on birds
Somateria fischeri
spatial foraging models
Spectacled Eider
trawling effects
spellingShingle climate change
Endangered Species Act
energetics models
individual-based models
Macoma calcarea
marine reserves
Nuculana radiata
sea-ice effects on birds
Somateria fischeri
spatial foraging models
Spectacled Eider
trawling effects
Lovvorn, James R
Grebmeier, Jacqueline M
Cooper, Lee W.
Bump, Joseph K.
Richman, Samantha E.
Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
topic_facet climate change
Endangered Species Act
energetics models
individual-based models
Macoma calcarea
marine reserves
Nuculana radiata
sea-ice effects on birds
Somateria fischeri
spatial foraging models
Spectacled Eider
trawling effects
description Delineating protected areas for sensitive species is a growing challenge as changing climate alters the geographic pattern of habitats as well as human responses to those shifts. When human impacts are expected within projected ranges of threatened species, there is often demand to demarcate the minimum habitat required to ensure the species' persistence. Because diminished or wide-ranging populations may not occupy all viable (and needed) habitat at once, one must identify thresholds of resources that will support the species even in unoccupied areas. Long-term data on the shifting mosaic of critical resources may indicate ranges of future variability. We addressed these issues for the Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri), a federally threatened species that winters in pack ice of the Bering Sea. Changing climate has decreased ice cover and severely reduced the eiders' benthic prey and has increased prospects for expansion of bottom trawling that may further affect prey communities. To assess long-term changes in habitats that will support eiders, we linked data on benthic prey, sea ice, and weather from 1970 to 2001 with a spatially explicit simulation model of eider energy balance that integrated field, laboratory, and remote-sensing studies. Areas estimated to have prey densities adequate for eiders in 1970–1974 did not include most areas that were viable 20 years later (1993–1994). Unless the entire area with adequate prey in 1993–1994 had been protected, the much reduced viable area in 1999–2001 might well have been excluded. During long non-foraging periods (as at night), eiders can save much energy by resting on ice vs. floating on water; thus, loss of ice cover in the future might substantially decrease the area in which prey densities are adequate to offset the eiders' energy needs. For wide-ranging benthivores such as eiders, our results emphasize that fixed protected areas based on current conditions can be too small or inflexible to subsume long-term shifts in habitat conditions. Better knowledge of patterns of natural disturbance experienced by prey communities, and appropriate allocation of human disturbance over seasons or years, may yield alternative strategies to large-scale closures that may be politically and economically problematic
format Text
author Lovvorn, James R
Grebmeier, Jacqueline M
Cooper, Lee W.
Bump, Joseph K.
Richman, Samantha E.
author_facet Lovvorn, James R
Grebmeier, Jacqueline M
Cooper, Lee W.
Bump, Joseph K.
Richman, Samantha E.
author_sort Lovvorn, James R
title Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
title_short Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
title_full Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
title_fullStr Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
title_full_unstemmed Modeling Marine Protected Areas for Threatened Eiders in a Climatically Changing Bering Sea
title_sort modeling marine protected areas for threatened eiders in a climatically changing bering sea
publisher OpenSIUC
publishDate 2009
url https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/zool_pubs/21
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=zool_pubs
geographic Bering Sea
geographic_facet Bering Sea
genre Bering Sea
Sea ice
genre_facet Bering Sea
Sea ice
op_source Publications
op_relation https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/zool_pubs/21
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1018&context=zool_pubs
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