Global climate change is driving the redistribution of marine species and thereby potentially restructuring endemic communities. Understanding how localised conservation measures such as protection from additional human pressures can confer resilience to ecosystems is therefore an important area of research. Here, we examine the resilience of a no-take marine reserve (NTR) to the establishment of urchin barrens habitat. The barrens habitat is created through overgrazing of kelp by an invading urchin species that is expanding its range within a hotspot of rapid climate change. In our study region, a multi-year monitoring program provides a unique time-series of benthic imagery collected by an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) within an NTR...
Sea urchin grazing can result in regime shift from productive kelp beds to seaurchin barren grounds ...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Better mitigation of anthropogenic stressors on marine ecosystems is urgently needed to address incr...
Global climate change is driving the redistribution of marine species and thereby potentially restru...
Restricting human activities through Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) is assumed to create more resilie...
Marine protected areas have long been proposed as a key tool to restore lost food web interactions a...
Spatial closures in the marine environment are widely accepted as effective conservation and fisher...
Across many temperate coastlines worldwide, kelp habitat has degraded to be replaced by alternative ...
In recent decades there has been a concerning trend of loss of kelp beds to sea urchin ‘barrens’ as ...
Marine protected areas (MPAs) are employed as tools to manage human impacts, especially fishing pres...
The barrens-forming sea urchin Centrostephanus rodgersii (Diadematidae) has undergone recent polewar...
Chronic anthropogenic disturbance has left many marine systems at risk of degrading into undesirable...
Resilience is the ability of the ecosystem to recover after a perturbation. Assessing the resilience...
Sea urchin grazing can result in regime shift from productive kelp beds to seaurchin barren grounds ...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Better mitigation of anthropogenic stressors on marine ecosystems is urgently needed to address incr...
Global climate change is driving the redistribution of marine species and thereby potentially restru...
Restricting human activities through Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) is assumed to create more resilie...
Marine protected areas have long been proposed as a key tool to restore lost food web interactions a...
Spatial closures in the marine environment are widely accepted as effective conservation and fisher...
Across many temperate coastlines worldwide, kelp habitat has degraded to be replaced by alternative ...
In recent decades there has been a concerning trend of loss of kelp beds to sea urchin ‘barrens’ as ...
Marine protected areas (MPAs) are employed as tools to manage human impacts, especially fishing pres...
The barrens-forming sea urchin Centrostephanus rodgersii (Diadematidae) has undergone recent polewar...
Chronic anthropogenic disturbance has left many marine systems at risk of degrading into undesirable...
Resilience is the ability of the ecosystem to recover after a perturbation. Assessing the resilience...
Sea urchin grazing can result in regime shift from productive kelp beds to seaurchin barren grounds ...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Better mitigation of anthropogenic stressors on marine ecosystems is urgently needed to address incr...