Recent empirical studies have demonstrated that human activities such as fishing can strongly affect the natural capital and services provided by tropical seascapes. However, policies to mitigate anthropogenic impacts can also alter food web structure and interactions, regardless of whether the regulations are aimed at single or multiple species, with possible unexpected consequences for the ecosystems and their associated services. Complex community response to management interventions have been highlighted in the Caribbean, where, contrary to predictions from linear food chain models, a reduction in fishing intensity through the establishment of a marine reserve has led to greater biomass of herbivorous fish inside the reserve, despite an...
Preserving biodiversity and ecosystem function in the Anthropocene is one of humanity\u27s greatest ...
The natural, prehuman abundance of most large predators is unknown because of the lack of historical...
Reduced fishing pressure and weak predator–prey interactions within marine reserves can create troph...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of...
Fishing and other human activities can alter the abundances, size structure, and behavior of species...
Marine reserves are known to directly replenish overfished species. However, the\ud community-wide e...
Marine reserves can restore fish abundance and diversity in areas impacted by overfishing, but the e...
Marine reserves are increasingly recognized as having linked social and ecological dynamics. This st...
Managing diverse ecosystems is challenging because structuring drivers are often processes having di...
Fisheries managers have the potential to significantly improve reef fish management in the Gulf of M...
This study highlights the importance of interspecific interactions among marine organisms and the ef...
Increased documentation and awareness of the decline of fisheries at a global scale is partly testam...
After the establishment of marine reserves, trophic cascades, with an increase in top predators, dec...
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) offer a unique opportunity to test the assumption that fishing pressur...
Fishing has clear direct effects on harvested species, but its cascading, indirect effects are less ...
Preserving biodiversity and ecosystem function in the Anthropocene is one of humanity\u27s greatest ...
The natural, prehuman abundance of most large predators is unknown because of the lack of historical...
Reduced fishing pressure and weak predator–prey interactions within marine reserves can create troph...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of...
Fishing and other human activities can alter the abundances, size structure, and behavior of species...
Marine reserves are known to directly replenish overfished species. However, the\ud community-wide e...
Marine reserves can restore fish abundance and diversity in areas impacted by overfishing, but the e...
Marine reserves are increasingly recognized as having linked social and ecological dynamics. This st...
Managing diverse ecosystems is challenging because structuring drivers are often processes having di...
Fisheries managers have the potential to significantly improve reef fish management in the Gulf of M...
This study highlights the importance of interspecific interactions among marine organisms and the ef...
Increased documentation and awareness of the decline of fisheries at a global scale is partly testam...
After the establishment of marine reserves, trophic cascades, with an increase in top predators, dec...
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) offer a unique opportunity to test the assumption that fishing pressur...
Fishing has clear direct effects on harvested species, but its cascading, indirect effects are less ...
Preserving biodiversity and ecosystem function in the Anthropocene is one of humanity\u27s greatest ...
The natural, prehuman abundance of most large predators is unknown because of the lack of historical...
Reduced fishing pressure and weak predator–prey interactions within marine reserves can create troph...