Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats. / Hiddink, Jan Geert; Kaiser, Michel J.; Sciberras, Marija et al.
In: Journal of Applied Ecology, Vol. 57, No. 7, 01.07.2020, p. 1199-1209.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Hiddink, JG, Kaiser, MJ, Sciberras, M, McConnaughey, RA, Mazor, T, Hilborn, R, Collie, JS, Pitcher, CR, Parma, AM, Suuronen, P, Rijnsdorp, AD & Jennings, S 2020, 'Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats', Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 57, no. 7, pp. 1199-1209. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13617

APA

Hiddink, J. G., Kaiser, M. J., Sciberras, M., McConnaughey, R. A., Mazor, T., Hilborn, R., Collie, J. S., Pitcher, C. R., Parma, A. M., Suuronen, P., Rijnsdorp, A. D., & Jennings, S. (2020). Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats. Journal of Applied Ecology, 57(7), 1199-1209. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13617

CBE

Hiddink JG, Kaiser MJ, Sciberras M, McConnaughey RA, Mazor T, Hilborn R, Collie JS, Pitcher CR, Parma AM, Suuronen P, et al. 2020. Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats. Journal of Applied Ecology. 57(7):1199-1209. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13617

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Hiddink JG, Kaiser MJ, Sciberras M, McConnaughey RA, Mazor T, Hilborn R et al. Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats. Journal of Applied Ecology. 2020 Jul 1;57(7):1199-1209. Epub 2020 Mar 19. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.13617

Author

Hiddink, Jan Geert ; Kaiser, Michel J. ; Sciberras, Marija et al. / Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats. In: Journal of Applied Ecology. 2020 ; Vol. 57, No. 7. pp. 1199-1209.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Selection of indicators for assessing and managing the impacts of bottom trawling on seabed habitats

AU - Hiddink, Jan Geert

AU - Kaiser, Michel J.

AU - Sciberras, Marija

AU - McConnaughey, Robert A.

AU - Mazor, Tessa

AU - Hilborn, Ray

AU - Collie, Jeremy S.

AU - Pitcher, C. Roland

AU - Parma, Ana M.

AU - Suuronen, Petri

AU - Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.

AU - Jennings, Simon

PY - 2020/7/1

Y1 - 2020/7/1

N2 - Bottom trawl fisheries are the most widespread source of anthropogenic physical disturbance to seabed habitats. Development of fisheries-, conservation- and ecosystem-based management strategies requires the selection of indicators of the impact of bottom trawling on the state of benthic biota. Many indicators have been proposed, but no rigorous test of a range of candidate indicators against nine commonly agreed criteria (concreteness, theoretical basis, public awareness, cost, measurement, historical data, sensitivity, responsiveness, specificity) has been performed.Here, we collated data from 41 studies that compared the benthic biota in trawled areas with those in control locations (that were either not trawled or trawled infrequently), examining seven potential indicators (numbers and biomass for individual taxa and whole communities, evenness, Shannon–Wiener diversity and species richness) to assess their performance against the set of nine criteria.The effects of trawling were stronger on whole-community numbers and biomass than for individual taxa. Species richness was also negatively affected by trawling but other measures of diversity were not. Community numbers and biomass met all criteria, taxa numbers and biomass and species richness satisfied most criteria, but evenness and Shannon–Wiener diversity did not respond to trawling and only met few criteria, and hence are not suitable state indicators of the effect of bottom trawling.Synthesis and applications. An evaluation of each candidate indicator against a commonly agreed suite of desirable properties coupled with the outputs of our meta-analysis showed that whole-community numbers of individuals and biomass are the most suitable indicators of bottom trawling impacts as they performed well on all criteria. Strengths of these indicators are that they respond strongly to trawling, relate directly to ecosystem functioning and are straightforward to measure. Evenness and Shannon–Wiener diversity are not responsive to trawling and unsuitable for the monitoring and assessment of bottom trawl impacts.

AB - Bottom trawl fisheries are the most widespread source of anthropogenic physical disturbance to seabed habitats. Development of fisheries-, conservation- and ecosystem-based management strategies requires the selection of indicators of the impact of bottom trawling on the state of benthic biota. Many indicators have been proposed, but no rigorous test of a range of candidate indicators against nine commonly agreed criteria (concreteness, theoretical basis, public awareness, cost, measurement, historical data, sensitivity, responsiveness, specificity) has been performed.Here, we collated data from 41 studies that compared the benthic biota in trawled areas with those in control locations (that were either not trawled or trawled infrequently), examining seven potential indicators (numbers and biomass for individual taxa and whole communities, evenness, Shannon–Wiener diversity and species richness) to assess their performance against the set of nine criteria.The effects of trawling were stronger on whole-community numbers and biomass than for individual taxa. Species richness was also negatively affected by trawling but other measures of diversity were not. Community numbers and biomass met all criteria, taxa numbers and biomass and species richness satisfied most criteria, but evenness and Shannon–Wiener diversity did not respond to trawling and only met few criteria, and hence are not suitable state indicators of the effect of bottom trawling.Synthesis and applications. An evaluation of each candidate indicator against a commonly agreed suite of desirable properties coupled with the outputs of our meta-analysis showed that whole-community numbers of individuals and biomass are the most suitable indicators of bottom trawling impacts as they performed well on all criteria. Strengths of these indicators are that they respond strongly to trawling, relate directly to ecosystem functioning and are straightforward to measure. Evenness and Shannon–Wiener diversity are not responsive to trawling and unsuitable for the monitoring and assessment of bottom trawl impacts.

KW - Ecology

U2 - 10.1111/1365-2664.13617

DO - 10.1111/1365-2664.13617

M3 - Article

VL - 57

SP - 1199

EP - 1209

JO - Journal of Applied Ecology

JF - Journal of Applied Ecology

SN - 0021-8901

IS - 7

ER -