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Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy

Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy
Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy
The deep sea (>200 m depth) encompasses >95% of the world’s ocean volume and represents the largest and least explored biome on Earth (<0.0001% of ocean surface), yet is increasingly under threat from multiple direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures. Our ability to preserve both benthic and pelagic deep-sea ecosystems depends upon effective ecosystem-based management strategies and monitoring based on widely agreed deep-sea ecological variables. Here, we identify a set of deep-sea essential ecological variables among five scientific areas of the deep ocean: (1) biodiversity; (2) ecosystem functions; (3) impacts and risk assessment; (4) climate change, adaptation and evolution; and (5) ecosystem conservation. Conducting an expert elicitation (1,155 deep-sea scientists consulted and 112 respondents), our analysis indicates a wide consensus amongst deep-sea experts that monitoring should prioritize large organisms (that is, macro- and megafauna) living in deep waters and in benthic habitats, whereas monitoring of ecosystem functioning should focus on trophic structure and biomass production. Habitat degradation and recovery rates are identified as crucial features for monitoring deep-sea ecosystem health, while global climate change will likely shift bathymetric distributions and cause local extinction in deep-sea species. Finally, deep-sea conservation efforts should focus primarily on vulnerable marine ecosystems and habitat-forming species. Deep-sea observation efforts that prioritize these variables will help to support the implementation of effective management strategies on a global scale.
2397-334X
181-192
Danovaro, Roberto
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Fanelli, Emanuela
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Aguzzi, Jacopo
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Billett, David
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Carugati, Laura
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Corinaldesi, Cinzia
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Dell’anno, Antonio
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Gjerde, Kristina
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Jamieson, Alan J.
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Kark, Salit
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Mcclain, Craig
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Levin, Lisa
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Levin, Noam
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Ramirez-llodra, Eva
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Ruhl, Henry
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Smith, Craig R.
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Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
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Thomsen, Laurenz
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Van Dover, Cindy L.
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Yasuhara, Moriaki
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Danovaro, Roberto
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Fanelli, Emanuela
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Aguzzi, Jacopo
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Billett, David
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Carugati, Laura
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Corinaldesi, Cinzia
f328d1bb-092d-4e88-af5d-722b62156be9
Dell’anno, Antonio
1df19fad-df27-45ca-ae19-1d88436a6925
Gjerde, Kristina
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Jamieson, Alan J.
ab7c9067-fe1d-47f9-921f-c57108b6f23c
Kark, Salit
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Mcclain, Craig
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Levin, Lisa
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Levin, Noam
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Ramirez-llodra, Eva
eb365797-2452-4fed-9d48-1f78ace160ef
Ruhl, Henry
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Smith, Craig R.
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Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
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Thomsen, Laurenz
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Van Dover, Cindy L.
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Yasuhara, Moriaki
d0b73324-3712-4e8c-a307-002e8db15580

Danovaro, Roberto, Fanelli, Emanuela, Aguzzi, Jacopo, Billett, David, Carugati, Laura, Corinaldesi, Cinzia, Dell’anno, Antonio, Gjerde, Kristina, Jamieson, Alan J., Kark, Salit, Mcclain, Craig, Levin, Lisa, Levin, Noam, Ramirez-llodra, Eva, Ruhl, Henry, Smith, Craig R., Snelgrove, Paul V. R., Thomsen, Laurenz, Van Dover, Cindy L. and Yasuhara, Moriaki (2020) Ecological variables for developing a global deep-ocean monitoring and conservation strategy. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 4 (2), 181-192. (doi:10.1038/s41559-019-1091-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The deep sea (>200 m depth) encompasses >95% of the world’s ocean volume and represents the largest and least explored biome on Earth (<0.0001% of ocean surface), yet is increasingly under threat from multiple direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures. Our ability to preserve both benthic and pelagic deep-sea ecosystems depends upon effective ecosystem-based management strategies and monitoring based on widely agreed deep-sea ecological variables. Here, we identify a set of deep-sea essential ecological variables among five scientific areas of the deep ocean: (1) biodiversity; (2) ecosystem functions; (3) impacts and risk assessment; (4) climate change, adaptation and evolution; and (5) ecosystem conservation. Conducting an expert elicitation (1,155 deep-sea scientists consulted and 112 respondents), our analysis indicates a wide consensus amongst deep-sea experts that monitoring should prioritize large organisms (that is, macro- and megafauna) living in deep waters and in benthic habitats, whereas monitoring of ecosystem functioning should focus on trophic structure and biomass production. Habitat degradation and recovery rates are identified as crucial features for monitoring deep-sea ecosystem health, while global climate change will likely shift bathymetric distributions and cause local extinction in deep-sea species. Finally, deep-sea conservation efforts should focus primarily on vulnerable marine ecosystems and habitat-forming species. Deep-sea observation efforts that prioritize these variables will help to support the implementation of effective management strategies on a global scale.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 19 December 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 February 2020
Published date: February 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: We deeply thank M. Rex (University of Massachusetts) for valuable discussion and suggestions on an early draft of the manuscript. We are very grateful to M. Baker for supporting the authors in the distribution of the Qualtrics survey to the INDEEP and DOSI communities and to the deep-sea scientists that participated to the survey and J. Cerri for the analysis of Qualtrics results. This work was supported by the H2020 project MERCES (GA N. 689518) and IDEM (GA N. 11.0661/2017/750680/SUB/ EN V.C2.). E.R.-L. was supported by the Norwegian project MarMine (247626), the Norwegian Institute for Water Research and the H2020 project MERCES (GA N. 689518). P.V.R.S. was supported by the NSERC Canadian Healthy Oceans Network and CFREF Ocean Frontier Institute. L.T. is supported by JPI Oceans2 and ONC. J.A. is supported by ARIM (Autonomous Robotic sea-floor Infrastructure for bentho-pelagic Monitoring; MartTERA ERA-Net Cofound). L.L. acknowledges NSF grant OCE 1634172 and the Deep-Ocean Observing Strategy subcontract from the Consortium for Ocean Leadership. H.R. was supported by the EMSO-Link project of the European Commission (Grant agreement ID: 731036). Publisher Copyright: © 2020, Springer Nature Limited.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 442010
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442010
ISSN: 2397-334X
PURE UUID: 2525b8ed-a919-47e5-978a-fd95ab0eb357

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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2020 16:38
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:43

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Contributors

Author: Roberto Danovaro
Author: Emanuela Fanelli
Author: Jacopo Aguzzi
Author: David Billett
Author: Laura Carugati
Author: Cinzia Corinaldesi
Author: Antonio Dell’anno
Author: Kristina Gjerde
Author: Alan J. Jamieson
Author: Salit Kark
Author: Craig Mcclain
Author: Lisa Levin
Author: Noam Levin
Author: Eva Ramirez-llodra
Author: Henry Ruhl
Author: Craig R. Smith
Author: Paul V. R. Snelgrove
Author: Laurenz Thomsen
Author: Cindy L. Van Dover
Author: Moriaki Yasuhara

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