An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation

Global biodiversity is in decline, with the marine environment experiencing significant and increasing anthropogenic pressures. As a response, very large (105–106 km2) marine protected areas (MPAs) have become the dominant form of environmental protection in the marine environment. At present, howev...

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Main Author: Hogg, Oliver, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Southampton 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/1/Hogg_Oliver_PhD_Thesis_June_2018.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:424752 2023-07-30T03:59:22+02:00 An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation Hogg, Oliver, Thomas 2018-06-28 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/1/Hogg_Oliver_PhD_Thesis_June_2018.pdf en English eng University of Southampton https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/1/Hogg_Oliver_PhD_Thesis_June_2018.pdf Hogg, Oliver, Thomas (2018) An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 253pp. uos_thesis Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T22:25:16Z Global biodiversity is in decline, with the marine environment experiencing significant and increasing anthropogenic pressures. As a response, very large (105–106 km2) marine protected areas (MPAs) have become the dominant form of environmental protection in the marine environment. At present, however, paucity in scientific sampling makes prioritising which regions of the ocean to protect, especially over such large spatial scales, particularly problematic. One such very large MPA, covering an area of over 1 million Km2, is located at the sub-Antarctic South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands (SGSSI). This study uses the SGSSI MPA as a model system to assess the application of benthic habitat mapping as an evidence-based framework for the spatial prioritisation of marine conservation. This study presents an interdisciplinary methodology to marine landscape mapping, as a top-down, objective statistical approach to hierarchically partition and map the benthic environment into physical habitats types. Ordination analysis demonstrates a statistically significant relationship between environmentally-derived landscape mapping clusters and the composition of benthic species data from the region, thus attributing ecological relevance to the marine landscape map. Furthermore, this study adopts a bottom-up approach to habitat mapping, using an ensemble of habitat suitability models. Potential distributions are modelled for a range of benthic faunal attributes relevant to marine management, based on taxonomic classification, functional traits and vulnerability to disturbance. These modelled distributions are used to describe, for the first time, the bio-physical characteristics of SGSSI’s benthic environment. Synthesising both top-down and bottom-up approaches to habitat mapping, this study assesses the physical landscape clusters and modelled distribution results in relation to the spatial protection currently enforced at SGSSI. This synthesis addresses, (i) whether marine spatial planning in the region is representative ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic South Sandwich Islands University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Antarctic Sandwich Islands South Sandwich Islands
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language English
description Global biodiversity is in decline, with the marine environment experiencing significant and increasing anthropogenic pressures. As a response, very large (105–106 km2) marine protected areas (MPAs) have become the dominant form of environmental protection in the marine environment. At present, however, paucity in scientific sampling makes prioritising which regions of the ocean to protect, especially over such large spatial scales, particularly problematic. One such very large MPA, covering an area of over 1 million Km2, is located at the sub-Antarctic South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands (SGSSI). This study uses the SGSSI MPA as a model system to assess the application of benthic habitat mapping as an evidence-based framework for the spatial prioritisation of marine conservation. This study presents an interdisciplinary methodology to marine landscape mapping, as a top-down, objective statistical approach to hierarchically partition and map the benthic environment into physical habitats types. Ordination analysis demonstrates a statistically significant relationship between environmentally-derived landscape mapping clusters and the composition of benthic species data from the region, thus attributing ecological relevance to the marine landscape map. Furthermore, this study adopts a bottom-up approach to habitat mapping, using an ensemble of habitat suitability models. Potential distributions are modelled for a range of benthic faunal attributes relevant to marine management, based on taxonomic classification, functional traits and vulnerability to disturbance. These modelled distributions are used to describe, for the first time, the bio-physical characteristics of SGSSI’s benthic environment. Synthesising both top-down and bottom-up approaches to habitat mapping, this study assesses the physical landscape clusters and modelled distribution results in relation to the spatial protection currently enforced at SGSSI. This synthesis addresses, (i) whether marine spatial planning in the region is representative ...
format Thesis
author Hogg, Oliver, Thomas
spellingShingle Hogg, Oliver, Thomas
An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
author_facet Hogg, Oliver, Thomas
author_sort Hogg, Oliver, Thomas
title An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
title_short An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
title_full An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
title_fullStr An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
title_full_unstemmed An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation
title_sort integrated ecological and geophysical approach to habitat mapping and its application in marine conservation
publisher University of Southampton
publishDate 2018
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/1/Hogg_Oliver_PhD_Thesis_June_2018.pdf
geographic Antarctic
Sandwich Islands
South Sandwich Islands
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Sandwich Islands
South Sandwich Islands
genre Antarc*
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South Sandwich Islands
genre_facet Antarc*
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South Sandwich Islands
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/424752/1/Hogg_Oliver_PhD_Thesis_June_2018.pdf
Hogg, Oliver, Thomas (2018) An Integrated Ecological and Geophysical Approach to Habitat Mapping and its Application in Marine Conservation. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 253pp.
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