Marine Protected Areas: 1999
Publications
Author:
Babcock, R.C., Kelly, S., Shears, N.T., Walker, J.W., and Willis,
T.J.
Title: Changes in community structure in temperate
marine reserves.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
189: 125-134, 1999.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
'No-take' marine reserves provide a valuable tool for managing
marine resources as well as for providing relatively undisturbed
habitat with which to assess modifications to ecosystems. We
studied 2 marine reserves in northeastern New Zealand, the Leigh
Marine Reserve (established 1975) and Tawharanui Marine Park
(established 1982) in order to assess whether changes in protected
predator populations had resulted in other indirect changes to
grazers and consequently to algal abundance. Estimates of
abundance of the most common demersal predatory fish Pagrus
auratus indicated that adults of this species (i.e. large
enough to prey upon urchins) were at least 5.75 and 8.70 times
more abundant inside reserves than in adjacent unprotected areas.
Overall, P. auratus were also much larger inside reserves
with mean total lengths of 316 mm compared with 186 mm in fished
areas. The spiny lobster Jasus edwardsii displayed similar
trends, and was approximately 1.6 to 3.7 times more abundant
inside the reserves than outside. Lobsters within the reserves had
a mean carapace length of 109.9 mm, compared with 93.5 mm outside
the reserves. In one of the reserves, densities of the sea urchin
Evechinus chloroticus had declined from 4.9 to 1.4 m(-2)
since 1978 in areas formerly dominated by it. Consequently, kelp
forests were more extensive in 1998 than they were at the time of
reserve creation. Urchin-dominated barrens occupied only 14% of
available reef substratum in reserves as opposed to 40% in
unprotected areas. These changes in community structure, which
have persisted since at least 1994, demonstrate not only higher
trophic complexity than anticipated in Australasian ecosystems but
also increased primary and secondary productivity in marine
reserves as a consequence of protection. Trends inside reserves
indicate large-scale reduction of benthic primary production as an
indirect result of fishing activity in unprotected
areas.
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