Marie Skłodowska-Curie Standard European Fellowship; project FISHSCALE (ref 844213)
Electronic versions
Links
- Project results: Richardson, L.E., Heenan, A., Delargy, A.J. et al. Local human impacts disrupt depth-dependent zonation of tropical reef fish communities. Nat Ecol Evol 7, 1844–1855 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-023-02201-x
- All data and R code used in the Richardson et al. (2023) Nature Ecology & Evolution publication (FISHSCALE work packages 2 and 3) are available at this open-source repository. This dataset and code are also linked on Zenodo:https://zenodo.org/records/10058103; and indexed on Open AIRE:https://explore.openaire.eu/search/other?pid=10.5281%2Fzenodo.10058103
- Data and code for FISHSCALE work package 4 'Evaluate risks: Quantify the relative influence of a distinct human impact(s) given interactions with biophysical drivers on reef-fish functional structure (data sources: NOAA coral reef monitoring data for fish across Pacific Islands, from Heenan et al. 2017, data subset for study available in this GitHub link 'Jarvis_Fish_Marine_Heatwaves' also linked on Zenodo: https://zenodo.org/records/10620804; NOAA long-term satellite-derived thermal stress estimates, generated and available on GitHub: https://github.com/LauraERichardson/jarvis_sst_KT).
- Richardson, Laura (Recipient)
Ecosystem-based management is the dominant paradigm for species-rich, but data-poor coral reef fisheries. But its operationalisation is hindered by a lack of information on the natural organisation of coral reefs as determined by distinct
biophysical processes operating across scales in space and time, and therefore how that organisation is affected by local human impacts. Understanding how natural and human drivers interact to determine ecological organisation is critical to the
local, context specific and spatially explicit application of ecosystem assessments for management, such as prioritizing management areas based on recovery potential and degree of depletion from an unimpacted baseline state. FISHSCALE
not only addresses that knowledge gap, but for the first time uses a unique natural experiment of unprecedented scale with a novel combination of trait-based approaches and high-resolution oceanographic modelling to reveal the relative
influence of interacting biophysical environmental drivers and local human impacts on the functional structure of reef-fish communities across scales (from reefs to regional). Using existing multidisciplinary data spanning 45° of latitude and 65° of
longitude across 39 central western Pacific islands, this project will use predictive models to identify the natural biophysical mechanisms that best explain the spatial variation of reef-fish functional diversity across scales. It will then model how local human impacts disrupt those biophysical relationships, and explicitly quantify the relative impact of different human disturbances (from fishing to coastal development). Collectively, the results of FISHSCALE will advance our capacity to
predict spatial patterns in the structure of reef-fish communities, providing insight into relative ecosystem health and stability, and therefore advance the science underpinning ecosystem-based management of data poor coral reef systems.
This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 844213.
biophysical processes operating across scales in space and time, and therefore how that organisation is affected by local human impacts. Understanding how natural and human drivers interact to determine ecological organisation is critical to the
local, context specific and spatially explicit application of ecosystem assessments for management, such as prioritizing management areas based on recovery potential and degree of depletion from an unimpacted baseline state. FISHSCALE
not only addresses that knowledge gap, but for the first time uses a unique natural experiment of unprecedented scale with a novel combination of trait-based approaches and high-resolution oceanographic modelling to reveal the relative
influence of interacting biophysical environmental drivers and local human impacts on the functional structure of reef-fish communities across scales (from reefs to regional). Using existing multidisciplinary data spanning 45° of latitude and 65° of
longitude across 39 central western Pacific islands, this project will use predictive models to identify the natural biophysical mechanisms that best explain the spatial variation of reef-fish functional diversity across scales. It will then model how local human impacts disrupt those biophysical relationships, and explicitly quantify the relative impact of different human disturbances (from fishing to coastal development). Collectively, the results of FISHSCALE will advance our capacity to
predict spatial patterns in the structure of reef-fish communities, providing insight into relative ecosystem health and stability, and therefore advance the science underpinning ecosystem-based management of data poor coral reef systems.
This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 844213.
Awarded date | 12 Feb 2019 |
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Degree of recognition | International |
Granting Organisations | European Commission |
Research outputs ()
- Published
Local human impacts disrupt depth-dependent zonation of tropical reef fish communities
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Projects ()
Media coverage ()
Coral Reef Fish Predictably Change With Depth, Except When People Are Present
Press/Media: Research