Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation

Structures submerged in the sea by humans over millennia provide hard and longstanding evidence of anthropogenic influence in the marine environment. Many of these human-made reefs (HMRs) may provide opportunities for conservation despite having been created for different purposes such as fishing or tourism. In the middle of controversy around the costs and benefits of HMRs, a broad analysis of biodiversity and social values is necessary to assess conservation potential. This requires reframing HMRs as social-ecological systems, moving beyond comparisons with natural coral or rocky reefs to consider their roles as ecosystems in their own right; creating frameworks to track their type, number, size, units, location, characteristics, origins, social uses, and associated biodiversity locally and worldwide; and applying systematic assessment of conservation benefits in relation to stated conservation intentions. This integrative approach can catalyze learning, identify conservation opportunities, and inform positive management of HMRs into the future.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor, Sáenz Arroyo de los Cobos, María Andrea Doctora 1971- autora 21175, Milner Gulland, Eleanor Jane autora
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Arrecifes artificiales, Actividades antropogénicas, Conservación de los recursos marinos,
Online Access:https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/69/9/725/5542571
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:598412024-03-11T15:20:40ZSunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor Sáenz Arroyo de los Cobos, María Andrea Doctora 1971- autora 21175 Milner Gulland, Eleanor Jane autora textengStructures submerged in the sea by humans over millennia provide hard and longstanding evidence of anthropogenic influence in the marine environment. Many of these human-made reefs (HMRs) may provide opportunities for conservation despite having been created for different purposes such as fishing or tourism. In the middle of controversy around the costs and benefits of HMRs, a broad analysis of biodiversity and social values is necessary to assess conservation potential. This requires reframing HMRs as social-ecological systems, moving beyond comparisons with natural coral or rocky reefs to consider their roles as ecosystems in their own right; creating frameworks to track their type, number, size, units, location, characteristics, origins, social uses, and associated biodiversity locally and worldwide; and applying systematic assessment of conservation benefits in relation to stated conservation intentions. This integrative approach can catalyze learning, identify conservation opportunities, and inform positive management of HMRs into the future.Structures submerged in the sea by humans over millennia provide hard and longstanding evidence of anthropogenic influence in the marine environment. Many of these human-made reefs (HMRs) may provide opportunities for conservation despite having been created for different purposes such as fishing or tourism. In the middle of controversy around the costs and benefits of HMRs, a broad analysis of biodiversity and social values is necessary to assess conservation potential. This requires reframing HMRs as social-ecological systems, moving beyond comparisons with natural coral or rocky reefs to consider their roles as ecosystems in their own right; creating frameworks to track their type, number, size, units, location, characteristics, origins, social uses, and associated biodiversity locally and worldwide; and applying systematic assessment of conservation benefits in relation to stated conservation intentions. This integrative approach can catalyze learning, identify conservation opportunities, and inform positive management of HMRs into the future.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorArrecifes artificialesActividades antropogénicasConservación de los recursos marinosDisponible en líneaBioSciencehttps://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/69/9/725/5542571Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Arrecifes artificiales
Actividades antropogénicas
Conservación de los recursos marinos
Arrecifes artificiales
Actividades antropogénicas
Conservación de los recursos marinos
spellingShingle Arrecifes artificiales
Actividades antropogénicas
Conservación de los recursos marinos
Arrecifes artificiales
Actividades antropogénicas
Conservación de los recursos marinos
Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor
Sáenz Arroyo de los Cobos, María Andrea Doctora 1971- autora 21175
Milner Gulland, Eleanor Jane autora
Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
description Structures submerged in the sea by humans over millennia provide hard and longstanding evidence of anthropogenic influence in the marine environment. Many of these human-made reefs (HMRs) may provide opportunities for conservation despite having been created for different purposes such as fishing or tourism. In the middle of controversy around the costs and benefits of HMRs, a broad analysis of biodiversity and social values is necessary to assess conservation potential. This requires reframing HMRs as social-ecological systems, moving beyond comparisons with natural coral or rocky reefs to consider their roles as ecosystems in their own right; creating frameworks to track their type, number, size, units, location, characteristics, origins, social uses, and associated biodiversity locally and worldwide; and applying systematic assessment of conservation benefits in relation to stated conservation intentions. This integrative approach can catalyze learning, identify conservation opportunities, and inform positive management of HMRs into the future.
format Texto
topic_facet Arrecifes artificiales
Actividades antropogénicas
Conservación de los recursos marinos
author Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor
Sáenz Arroyo de los Cobos, María Andrea Doctora 1971- autora 21175
Milner Gulland, Eleanor Jane autora
author_facet Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor
Sáenz Arroyo de los Cobos, María Andrea Doctora 1971- autora 21175
Milner Gulland, Eleanor Jane autora
author_sort Castelló y Tickell, Sofia autor
title Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
title_short Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
title_full Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
title_fullStr Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
title_full_unstemmed Sunken worlds the past and future of Human-Made reefs in marine conservation
title_sort sunken worlds the past and future of human-made reefs in marine conservation
url https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/69/9/725/5542571
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