Fuzzy cognitive mapping as a tool to assess the relative cumulative effects of environmental stressors on an Arctic seabird population to identify conservation action and research priorities

Author:

Rooney Rebecca C.1ORCID,Daniel Jody1ORCID,Mallory Mark2ORCID,Hedd April3ORCID,Ives Jess4,Gilchrist Grant5ORCID,Gjerdrum Carina6ORCID,Robertson Greg3ORCID,Ronconi Rob6ORCID,Wilcox Kirsten7,Wong Sarah6,Provencher Jennifer5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

2. Biology, Acadia University Wolfville Nova Scotia Canada

3. Science and Technology Branch, Environment and Climate Change Canada Mount Pearl Newfoundland and Labrador Canada

4. Department of Biology University of Windsor Windsor Ontario Canada

5. Science and Technology Branch, Environment and Climate Change Canada Ottawa Ontario Canada

6. Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment and Climate Change Canada Dartmouth Nova Scotia Canada

7. Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment and Climate Change Canada Iqaluit Nunavut Canada

Abstract

Abstract In the Arctic, chemical contaminants, shipping, oil pollution, plastic pollution, changing habitats in relation to climate change and fisheries have been identified as environmental stressors to seabirds such as Fulmarus glacialis (northern fulmar; qaqulluk; ᖃᖁᓪᓗᖅ), but rarely have these stressors been considered within a cumulative effects framework in this species which is currently showing a declining populations trend. As a novel tool to understand cumulative effects within a conservation context, we applied a fuzzy cognitive mapping (FCM) approach that allows experts to arrange key factors and their interrelationships, organizing their understanding of the components of a complex issue into a graphical representation; a ‘cognitive map’. This process was grounded in local environment concerns as documented in several Nunavut‐specific reports and discussions, and worked with western‐trained seabird experts with knowledge of northern fulmar populations to assess the inter‐related environmental threats to fulmars as a way to combine these stressors in a cumulative effects framework and identify conservation actions and knowledge gaps. We found strong agreement that the main stressors affecting northern fulmar populations in Canada include pollution (11% total influence (TI)), shipping activities (16% TI), hunting and fishing (18% TI) and mining/oil and gas exploitation activities (22% TI). The indirect influence of threats on northern fulmar population size (57% TI) exceeded the total direct influence (43% TI), emphasizing the value of cognitive mapping in cumulative effects assessment for a more holistic understanding of interacting stressors. Participants expressed substantial uncertainty regarding the strong relationships leading from the concepts, commercial fishing activity in the BBDS and the North Atlantic fisheries activity, indicating that these potential stressors require more research. Similarly, uncertainty was expressed about the potential effects of zodiac traffic, ship strikes of northern fulmar, number of oil spills and magnitude of oil spills on northern fulmar. By characterizing individual factors as manageable or not, we determined that stressors are largely manageable with enforcement of existing policies (58% TI)—importantly, fishing activities were both highly influential on fulmars and deemed manageable, which will inform ongoing co‐management planning in the region.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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