Author:
Bax Nicholas J.,Williams Alan
Abstract
A hierarchical approach to mapping seabed habitat is presented. A provincial
scale survey that included hydrography and geology provided the context for
interpreting habitat use and vulnerability. A megascale map, developed in
cooperation with local fishers, identified major seabed features (kilometres
to 10s of kilometres). Vulnerability of a feature was defined as its
resistance to physical modification and its resilience, or capacity to
recover, on removal of the modifier. Vulnerability was assessed from
geological, biological and oceanological properties. Inner-shelf sandstone and
limestone reefs that were exposed and weathered during the last ice age, and
shelf-break bryozoan patch reefs, appear to be the most vulnerable of the
hard-grounds to physical disturbance. In contrast, larger, high-relief,
outer-shelf fossiliferous limestone reefs appear relatively invulnerable to
physical disturbance from fishing. Megascale features were the focus of
detailed physical and biological sampling at the mesoscale level (10 m to km),
the level of resolution necessary for establishing baseline conditions and
monitoring change. The hierarchical approach used here to map seabed habitat
amalgamates scientific and fishers’ information. Approached in this way,
habitat mapping has the potential to build a common framework of knowledge on
which effective spatial management can be based.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
61 articles.
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