Biological effects within no-take marine reserves: a global synthesis
University of California, Santa Barbara · National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis · +4 more institutions
Abstract
The study and implementation of no-take marine reserves have increased rapidly over the past decade, providing ample data on the biological effects of reserve protection for a wide range of geographic locations and organisms. The plethora of new studies affords the opportunity to reevaluate previous findings and address formerly unanswered questions with extensive data syntheses. Our results show, on average, positive effects of reserve protection on the biomass, numerical density, species richness, and size of organisms within their boundaries which are remarkably similar to those of past syntheses despite a near doubling of data. New analyses indicate that (1) these results do not appear to be an artifact of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 59.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 184
Authors
8- SLS LesterCorresponding
University of California, Santa Barbara
- BHBS Halpern
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, State Street (United States)
- KGKirsten Grorud‐Colvert
Oregon State University
- JLJane Lubchenco
Oregon State University
- BIBenjamin I. Ruttenberg
NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Fisheries Science Center, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service
Topics & keywords
- Miami
- Marine reserve
- Fisheries science
- Ecology
- Marine protected area
- Citizen science
- Geography
- Library science
- Life below water