Dear MARMAMers,

We are pleased to annouce the publication of a new article in Peer Community In 
Ecology on the importance of spatio-temporal dynamics on MPA's design:

Lambert, C., Dorémus, G. and V. Ridoux (2020) The persistence in time of 
distributional patterns in marine megafauna impacts zonal conservation 
strategies. bioRxiv, 790634, ver. 3 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI 
Ecology. doi: 10.1101/790634. (Recommendation can be found at: 
https://doi.org/10.24072/pci.ecology.100048)

The paper is in open access and can be found at 
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/790634v3.

Abstract:
The main type of zonal conservation approach corresponds to Marine Protected 
Areas (MPAs), which are spatially defined and generally static entities aiming 
at the protection of some target populations by the implementation of a 
management plan. For highly mobile species the relevance of an MPA over time 
might be hampered by temporal variations in distributions or home ranges. In 
the present work, we used habitat model-based predicted distributions of 
cetaceans and seabirds within the Bay of Biscay from 2004 to 2017 to 
characterise the aggregation and persistence of mobile species distributional 
patterns and the relevance of the existing MPA network. We explored the 
relationship between population abundance and spatial extent of distribution to 
assess the aggregation level of species distribution. We used the smallest 
spatial extent including 75% of the population present in the Bay of Biscay to 
define specific core areas of distributions, and calculated their persistence 
over the 14 studied years. We inspected the relevance of the MPA network with 
respect to aggregation and persistence. We found that aggregation and 
persistence are two independent features of marine megafauna distributions. 
Indeed, strong persistence was shown in both aggregated (bottlenose dolphins, 
auks) and loosely distributed species (northern gannets), while some species 
with aggregated distributions also showed limited year-to-year persistence in 
their patterns (black-legged kittiwakes). We thus have demonstrated that both 
aggregation and persistence have potential impact on the amount of 
spatio-temporal distributional variability encompassed within static MPAs. Our 
results exemplified the need to have access to a minimal temporal depth in the 
species distribution data when aiming to designate new site boundaries for the 
conservation of mobile species.




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