Hotspots for rockfishes, structural corals, and large-bodied sponges along the central coast of Pacific Canada

Author:

Frid Alejandro,McGreer Madeleine,Wilson Kyle L.,Du Preez Cherisse,Blaine Tristan,Norgard Tammy

Abstract

AbstractBiological hotspots are places with outstanding biodiversity features, and their delineation is essential to the design of marine protected areas (MPAs). For the Central Coast of Canada’s Northern Shelf Bioregion, where an MPA network is being developed, we identified hotspots for structural corals and large-bodied sponges, which are foundation species vulnerable to bottom contact fisheries, and for Sebastidae, a fish family which includes species that are long-lived (> 100 years), overexploited, evolutionary distinctive, and at high trophic levels. Using 11 years of survey data that spanned from inland fjords to oceanic waters, we derived hotspot indices that accounted for species characteristics and abundances and examined hotspot distribution across depths and oceanographic subregions. The results highlight previously undocumented hotspot distributions, thereby informing the placement of MPAs for which high levels of protection are warranted. Given the vulnerability of the taxa that we examined to cumulative fishery impacts, prospective MPAs derived from our data should be considered for interim protection measures during the protracted period between final network design and the enactment of MPA legislations. These recommendations reflect our scientific data, which are only one way of understanding the seascape. Our surveys did not cover many locations known to Indigenous peoples as biologically important. Consequently, Indigenous knowledge should also contribute substantially to the design of the MPA network.

Funder

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Aboriginal Aquatic Resource and Oceans Management Program

Marine Planning Partnership

Aboriginal Fund for Species at Risk

Oceans and Freshwater Science Contribution Program

Canada Nature Fund for Aquatic Species at Risk

Tula Foundation

Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship

Oceana Canada

Ocean Networks Canada

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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