five

Final technical report - Baseline characterization of newly established marine protected areas within the North Central California study region - seabird colony and foraging studies

收藏
DataONE2020-07-15 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:3cf203b3-f150-444e-9c1c-2da3d933a6cd
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
Seabirds are long-lived, upper trophic level predators that are integral components of marine ecosystems. During the breeding season, seabirds are central place foragers and must return to their nests to incubate eggs and provision young throughout the day. As such, they have limited foraging ranges during that time and will benefit from protected areas within these ranges. Marine protected areas (MPAs) can provide both direct and indirect benefits to seabirds. Direct benefits involve reducing the direct interactions seabirds have with humans like incidental take and gear entanglement as well as human-caused disturbance to breeding and roosting sites. Indirect benefits involve reducing competition with humans for prey resources. Many coastally breeding seabirds rely on juvenile age classes of fished species. Decreases in adult fish catch can lead to increased spawning biomass and, thus, more seabird prey. Herein, we summarize the results of baseline seabird monitoring within the North Central Coast Study Region (NCCSR) of California’s Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) Initiative in 2010-2012. The long-term objectives of our monitoring are to 1) document how seabirds are using coastal and nearshore habitats in relation to newly established MPAs and 2) develop seabirds as indicators to study the processes (e.g., recruitment) impacting change resulting from MPA establishment, including changes in in nearshore fish and invertebrate populations and human use patterns that can impact seabirds. This report was originally uploaded to Oceanspaces (http://oceanspaces.org/) in 2013 as part of the North Central Coast baseline monitoring program. In 2020 the baseline data and reports were uploaded to the California Ocean Protection Council Data Repository by Mike Esgro (Michael.Esgro@resources.ca.gov) and Rani Gaddam (gaddam@ucsc.edu). Every attempt has been made to include all of the original data, metadata, and reports submitted in 2013, but please contact the Data Set Contacts with any questions.
创建时间:
2020-07-15
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务