Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation

Over the past five years, a biogeographic characterization of Tortugas Ecological Reserve(TER) has been carried out to measure the post-implementation effects of TER as a refuge for exploited species. Our results demonstrate that there is substantial microalgal biomass at depths between 10 and 30 m in the soft sediments at the coral reef interface, and that this community may play an important role in the food web supporting reef organisms. In addition, preliminarystable isotope data, in conjunction with prior results from the west Florida shelf, suggest that the shallow water benthic habitats surrounding the coral reefs of TER will prove to be an important source of the primary production ultimately fueling fish production throughout TER. Themajority of the fish analyzed so far have exhibited a C isotope signature consistent with a food web which relies heavily on benthic primary production. Fish counts indicate a marked increase in the abundance of large fish (>20 cm) within the Reserve relative to the Out and Park strata,across years. Faunal collections from open and protected soft bottom habitat near the northern boundary of Tortugas North strongly suggest that relaxation of trawling pressure has increased benthic biomass and diversity in this area of TER. These data, employing an integrated Before -After Control Impact (BACI) design at multiple spatial scales, will allow us to continue to document and quantify the post-implementation effects of TER. (PDF contains 58 pages)

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Main Authors: Fonseca, Mark S., Uhrin, Amy V., Currin, Carolyn A., Burke, John S., Field, Donald W., Addison, Christine M., Wood, Lisa L., Piniak, Gregory A., Viehman, T. Shay, Bonn, Craig S.
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science 2006
Subjects:Ecology, Management, Fisheries,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19944
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-199442021-07-12T02:11:54Z Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation Fonseca, Mark S. Uhrin, Amy V. Currin, Carolyn A. Burke, John S. Field, Donald W. Addison, Christine M. Wood, Lisa L. Piniak, Gregory A. Viehman, T. Shay Bonn, Craig S. Ecology Management Fisheries Over the past five years, a biogeographic characterization of Tortugas Ecological Reserve(TER) has been carried out to measure the post-implementation effects of TER as a refuge for exploited species. Our results demonstrate that there is substantial microalgal biomass at depths between 10 and 30 m in the soft sediments at the coral reef interface, and that this community may play an important role in the food web supporting reef organisms. In addition, preliminarystable isotope data, in conjunction with prior results from the west Florida shelf, suggest that the shallow water benthic habitats surrounding the coral reefs of TER will prove to be an important source of the primary production ultimately fueling fish production throughout TER. Themajority of the fish analyzed so far have exhibited a C isotope signature consistent with a food web which relies heavily on benthic primary production. Fish counts indicate a marked increase in the abundance of large fish (>20 cm) within the Reserve relative to the Out and Park strata,across years. Faunal collections from open and protected soft bottom habitat near the northern boundary of Tortugas North strongly suggest that relaxation of trawling pressure has increased benthic biomass and diversity in this area of TER. These data, employing an integrated Before -After Control Impact (BACI) design at multiple spatial scales, will allow us to continue to document and quantify the post-implementation effects of TER. (PDF contains 58 pages) 2021-06-24T15:16:10Z 2021-06-24T15:16:10Z 2006 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19944 en NOAA Technical Memorandum NOS NCCOS http://www.ccfhr.noaa.gov/documents/reprint1584.pdf application/pdf application/pdf NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science Beaufort, NC http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2125 403 2014-02-21 20:25:45 2125 United States National Ocean Service
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Ecology
Management
Fisheries
Ecology
Management
Fisheries
spellingShingle Ecology
Management
Fisheries
Ecology
Management
Fisheries
Fonseca, Mark S.
Uhrin, Amy V.
Currin, Carolyn A.
Burke, John S.
Field, Donald W.
Addison, Christine M.
Wood, Lisa L.
Piniak, Gregory A.
Viehman, T. Shay
Bonn, Craig S.
Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
description Over the past five years, a biogeographic characterization of Tortugas Ecological Reserve(TER) has been carried out to measure the post-implementation effects of TER as a refuge for exploited species. Our results demonstrate that there is substantial microalgal biomass at depths between 10 and 30 m in the soft sediments at the coral reef interface, and that this community may play an important role in the food web supporting reef organisms. In addition, preliminarystable isotope data, in conjunction with prior results from the west Florida shelf, suggest that the shallow water benthic habitats surrounding the coral reefs of TER will prove to be an important source of the primary production ultimately fueling fish production throughout TER. Themajority of the fish analyzed so far have exhibited a C isotope signature consistent with a food web which relies heavily on benthic primary production. Fish counts indicate a marked increase in the abundance of large fish (>20 cm) within the Reserve relative to the Out and Park strata,across years. Faunal collections from open and protected soft bottom habitat near the northern boundary of Tortugas North strongly suggest that relaxation of trawling pressure has increased benthic biomass and diversity in this area of TER. These data, employing an integrated Before -After Control Impact (BACI) design at multiple spatial scales, will allow us to continue to document and quantify the post-implementation effects of TER. (PDF contains 58 pages)
format monograph
topic_facet Ecology
Management
Fisheries
author Fonseca, Mark S.
Uhrin, Amy V.
Currin, Carolyn A.
Burke, John S.
Field, Donald W.
Addison, Christine M.
Wood, Lisa L.
Piniak, Gregory A.
Viehman, T. Shay
Bonn, Craig S.
author_facet Fonseca, Mark S.
Uhrin, Amy V.
Currin, Carolyn A.
Burke, John S.
Field, Donald W.
Addison, Christine M.
Wood, Lisa L.
Piniak, Gregory A.
Viehman, T. Shay
Bonn, Craig S.
author_sort Fonseca, Mark S.
title Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
title_short Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
title_full Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
title_fullStr Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
title_full_unstemmed Ongoing monitoring of Tortugas Ecological Reserve: Assessing the consequences of reserve designation
title_sort ongoing monitoring of tortugas ecological reserve: assessing the consequences of reserve designation
publisher NOAA/National Ocean Service/National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19944
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