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Testing the presence of marine protected areas against their ability to reduce pressures on biodiversity
Authors:Simone L. Stevenson  Skipton N. C. Woolley  Jon Barnett  Piers Dunstan
Affiliation:1. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Centre for Integrative Ecology, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, VIC, 3125 Australia;2. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere, 3-4 Castray Esplanade, Battery Point, Hobart, TAS, 7004 Australia;3. School of Geography, University of Melbourne, 221 Bouverie Street, Carlton, VIC, 3053 Australia
Abstract:Marine protected areas (MPAs) are the preferred tool for preventing marine biodiversity loss, as reflected in international protected area targets. Although the area covered by MPAs is expanding, there is a concern that opposition from resource users is driving them into already low-use locations, whereas high-pressure areas remain unprotected, which has serious implications for biodiversity conservation. We tested the spatial relationships between different human-induced pressures on marine biodiversity and global MPAs. We used global, modeled pressure data and the World Database on Protected Areas to calculate the levels of 15 different human-induced pressures inside and outside the world's MPAs. We fitted binomial generalized linear models to the data to determine whether each pressure had a positive or negative effect on the likelihood of an area being protected and whether this effect changed with different categories of protection. Pelagic and artisanal fishing, shipping, and introductions of invasive species by ships had a negative relationship with protection, and this relationship persisted under even the least restrictive categories of protection (e.g., protected areas classified as category VI under the International Union for Conservation of Nature, a category that permits sustainable use). In contrast, pressures from dispersed, diffusive sources (e.g., pollution and ocean acidification) had positive relationships with protection. Our results showed that MPAs are systematically established in areas where there is low political opposition, limiting the capacity of existing MPAs to manage key drivers of biodiversity loss. We suggest that conservation efforts focus on biodiversity outcomes and effective reduction of pressures rather than prescribing area-based targets, and that alternative approaches to conservation are needed in areas where protection is not feasible.
Keywords:Aichi Target 11  bias  biodiversity  conservation planning  global  ocean  site selection  biodiversidad  global  Objetivo 11 de Aichi  océano  planeación de la conservación  selección de sitio  sesgo
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