Document of bibliographic reference 350784

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
A trait‐based framework for assessing the vulnerability of marine species to human impacts
Abstract
Marine species and ecosystems are widely affected by anthropogenic stressors, ranging from pollution and fishing to climate change. Comprehensive assessments of how species and ecosystems are impacted by anthropogenic stressors are critical for guiding conservation and management investments. Previous global risk or vulnerability assessments have focused on marine habitats, or on limited taxa or specific regions. However, information about the susceptibility of marine species across a range of taxa to different stressors everywhere is required to predict how marine biodiversity will respond to human pressures. We present a novel framework that uses life-history traits to assess species' vulnerability to a stressor, which we compare across more than 44,000 species from 12 taxonomic groups (classes). Using expert elicitation and literature review, we assessed every combination of each of 42 traits and 22 anthropogenic stressors to calculate each species' or representative species group's sensitivity and adaptive capacity to stressors, and then used these assessments to derive their overall relative vulnerability. The stressors with the greatest potential impact were related to biomass removal (e.g., fisheries), pollution, and climate change. The taxa with the highest vulnerabilities across the range of stressors were mollusks, corals, and echinoderms, while elasmobranchs had the highest vulnerability to fishing-related stressors. Traits likely to confer vulnerability to climate change stressors were related to the presence of calcium carbonate structures, and whether a species exists across the interface of marine, terrestrial, and atmospheric realms. Traits likely to confer vulnerability to pollution stressors were related to planktonic state, organism size, and respiration. Such a replicable, broadly applicable method is useful for informing ocean conservation and management decisions at a range of scales, and the framework is amenable to further testing and improvement. Our framework for assessing the vulnerability of marine species is the first critical step toward generating cumulative human impact maps based on comprehensive assessments of species, rather than habitats.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000760264100022
Bibliographic citation
Butt, N.; Halpern, B.S.; O’Hara, C.C.; Allcock, A.L.; Polidoro, B.; Sherman, S.; Byrne, M.; Birkeland, C.; Dwyer, R.G.; Frazier, M.; Woodworth, B.K.; Arango, C.P.; Kingsford, M.J.; Udyawer, V.; Hutchings, P.; Scanes, E.; McClaren, E.J.; Maxwell, S.M.; Diáz-Pulido, G.; Dugan, E.; Simmons, B.A.; Wenger, A.S.; Linardich, C.; Klein, C.J. (2022). A trait‐based framework for assessing the vulnerability of marine species to human impacts. Ecosphere 13(2): e3919. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3919
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Nathalie Butt
author
Name
Benjamin Halpern
author
Name
Casey O’Hara
author
Name
A. Louise Allcock
author
Name
Beth Polidoro
author
Name
Samantha Sherman
author
Name
Maria Byrne
author
Name
Charles Birkeland
author
Name
Ross Dwyer
author
Name
Melanie Frazier
author
Name
Bradley Woodworth
author
Name
Claudia Arango
author
Name
Michael Kingsford
author
Name
Vinay Udyawer
author
Name
Pat Hutchings
author
Name
Elliot Scanes
author
Name
Emily McClaren
author
Name
Sara Maxwell
author
Name
Guillermo Diáz-Pulido
author
Name
Emma Dugan
author
Name
Blake Simmons
author
Name
Amelia Wenger
author
Name
Christi Linardich
author
Name
Carissa Klein

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3919

Document metadata

date created
2022-04-04
date modified
2022-04-08