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A trophic model of a Galapagos subtidal rocky reef for evaluating fisheries and conservation strategies
Citation
Okey, TA and Banks, S and Born, AF and Bustamante, RH and Calvopina, M and Edgar, GJ and Espinoza, E and Farina, JM and Garske, LE and Reck, GK and Salazar, S and Shepherd, S and Toral-Granda, V and Wallem, P, A trophic model of a Galapagos subtidal rocky reef for evaluating fisheries and conservation strategies, Ecological Modelling, 172, (2-4) pp. 383-401. ISSN 0304-3800 (2004) [Refereed Article]
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2003.09.019
Abstract
A balanced trophic model of a Galápagos rocky reef system was constructed using Ecopath and Ecosim. The Ecopath approach allowed characterization of food web structure through integration of disparate ecosystem information derived from many years of study of Galápagos shallow-water rocky reefs. Ecosim and Ecospace routines enabled us to explore various hypotheses about system dynamics as well as potential solutions to conservation concerns about overfishing. A full series of functional group removal simulations resulted in estimations of interaction strengths and 'keystone' potentials for each of the 42 living functional groups in the model. Relative interaction strengths in a pristine unfished system are likely to be quite different from interaction strengths indicated by this present-day model. At present, humans extract food from very low trophic levels (mean trophic level=2.3) in Galápagos rocky reef systems because sea cucumbers and detritivorous mullets comprised 71 and 15%, respectively, of the total fisheries catch. Catch rates of sea cucumbers (Stichopus fuscus; referred to here as 'pepinos') are shown to be unsustainable, and the population should be declining rapidly. The exclusion of fishing from 23% of the total reef area, representing a hypothetical non-extractive zone, prevented the functional extinction of pepinos that our analysis predicted to occur with no areas protected (given 1999-2000 capture rates). Even with 23% of the hypothetical area protected, pepinos were predicted to decline overall to a stable 36% of their current estimated biomass. Pepino biomass was predicted to increase to eight times that of current levels if pepino fishing were stopped altogether. © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Item Details
Item Type: | Refereed Article |
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Research Division: | Biological Sciences |
Research Group: | Ecology |
Research Field: | Marine and estuarine ecology (incl. marine ichthyology) |
Objective Division: | Environmental Management |
Objective Group: | Marine systems and management |
Objective Field: | Rehabilitation or conservation of marine environments |
UTAS Author: | Edgar, GJ (Professor Graham Edgar) |
ID Code: | 31134 |
Year Published: | 2004 |
Web of Science® Times Cited: | 97 |
Deposited By: | TAFI - Zoology |
Deposited On: | 2004-08-01 |
Last Modified: | 2011-10-03 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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