Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol

Abstract Background Tropical coastal marine ecosystems (TCMEs) are rich in biodiversity and provide many ecosystem services, including carbon storage, shoreline protection, and food. Coastal areas are home to increasing numbers of people and population growth is expected to continue, putting TCMEs u...

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Main Authors: Willa R. Brooks, Morgan E. Rudd, Samantha H. Cheng, Brian R. Silliman, David A. Gill, Gabby N. Ahmadia, Dominic A. Andradi-Brown, Louise Glew, Lisa M. Campbell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-05-01
Series:Environmental Evidence
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13750-020-00193-w
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spelling doaj-2a21395da69f4f25906d3a3f8c53f7482020-11-25T03:45:59ZengBMCEnvironmental Evidence2047-23822020-05-019111210.1186/s13750-020-00193-wSocial and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocolWilla R. Brooks0Morgan E. Rudd1Samantha H. Cheng2Brian R. Silliman3David A. Gill4Gabby N. Ahmadia5Dominic A. Andradi-Brown6Louise Glew7Lisa M. Campbell8Duke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke UniversityDuke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke UniversityCenter for Biodiversity and Conservation, American Museum of Natural HistoryDuke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke UniversityDuke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke UniversityOcean Conservation, World Wildlife Fund-USOcean Conservation, World Wildlife Fund-USGlobal Science, World Wildlife Fund-USDuke University Marine Lab, Nicholas School of Environment, Duke UniversityAbstract Background Tropical coastal marine ecosystems (TCMEs) are rich in biodiversity and provide many ecosystem services, including carbon storage, shoreline protection, and food. Coastal areas are home to increasing numbers of people and population growth is expected to continue, putting TCMEs under pressure from development as well as broader environmental changes associated with climate change, e.g. sea level rise and ocean acidification. Attention to TCMEs by conservation organizations has increased and although a variety of interventions to promote conservation and sustainable development of TCMEs have been implemented, evidence regarding the outcomes of these—for people or ecosystems—is scattered and unclear. This study takes a systematic mapping approach to identify articles that examine the ecological and social outcomes associated with conservation interventions in TCMEs; specifically in coral reef, mangrove, and seagrass habitats. Methods We developed a comprehensive framework of conservation interventions and outcomes, drawing on existing frameworks and related evidence synthesis projects, as well as interviews with marine conservation practitioners. We modified existing frameworks to: (i) include features of TCME that are not fully captured in existing frameworks; and (ii) further specify and/or regroup existing interventions or outcomes. We developed a search string informed by habitat, geography, interventions, and outcomes of interest, to search the peer-reviewed primary literature in four bibliographic databases and the grey literature on relevant institutional websites. All searches will be conducted in English. We will screen returned articles at the title and abstract level. Included articles will be screened at full text level and data coding will follow. Number of articles and reasons for excluding at full text level screening will be recorded. At each phase (title and abstract screening, full text screening, data coding), articles will be assessed independently by two members of the review team. Coded data will be reported in a narrative review and a database accessible through an open access, searchable data portal. We will summarize trends in the evidence base, identify interventions and outcomes where evidence can be further assessed in subsequent systematic reviews and where gaps in the literature exist, and discuss the implications of research gaps and gluts for TCME conservation policy, practice, and future research.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13750-020-00193-wEcosystem functionsEcosystem servicesHuman well-beingGovernanceCoralMangrove
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Willa R. Brooks
Morgan E. Rudd
Samantha H. Cheng
Brian R. Silliman
David A. Gill
Gabby N. Ahmadia
Dominic A. Andradi-Brown
Louise Glew
Lisa M. Campbell
spellingShingle Willa R. Brooks
Morgan E. Rudd
Samantha H. Cheng
Brian R. Silliman
David A. Gill
Gabby N. Ahmadia
Dominic A. Andradi-Brown
Louise Glew
Lisa M. Campbell
Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
Environmental Evidence
Ecosystem functions
Ecosystem services
Human well-being
Governance
Coral
Mangrove
author_facet Willa R. Brooks
Morgan E. Rudd
Samantha H. Cheng
Brian R. Silliman
David A. Gill
Gabby N. Ahmadia
Dominic A. Andradi-Brown
Louise Glew
Lisa M. Campbell
author_sort Willa R. Brooks
title Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
title_short Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
title_full Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
title_fullStr Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
title_full_unstemmed Social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
title_sort social and ecological outcomes of conservation interventions in tropical coastal marine ecosystems: a systematic map protocol
publisher BMC
series Environmental Evidence
issn 2047-2382
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Abstract Background Tropical coastal marine ecosystems (TCMEs) are rich in biodiversity and provide many ecosystem services, including carbon storage, shoreline protection, and food. Coastal areas are home to increasing numbers of people and population growth is expected to continue, putting TCMEs under pressure from development as well as broader environmental changes associated with climate change, e.g. sea level rise and ocean acidification. Attention to TCMEs by conservation organizations has increased and although a variety of interventions to promote conservation and sustainable development of TCMEs have been implemented, evidence regarding the outcomes of these—for people or ecosystems—is scattered and unclear. This study takes a systematic mapping approach to identify articles that examine the ecological and social outcomes associated with conservation interventions in TCMEs; specifically in coral reef, mangrove, and seagrass habitats. Methods We developed a comprehensive framework of conservation interventions and outcomes, drawing on existing frameworks and related evidence synthesis projects, as well as interviews with marine conservation practitioners. We modified existing frameworks to: (i) include features of TCME that are not fully captured in existing frameworks; and (ii) further specify and/or regroup existing interventions or outcomes. We developed a search string informed by habitat, geography, interventions, and outcomes of interest, to search the peer-reviewed primary literature in four bibliographic databases and the grey literature on relevant institutional websites. All searches will be conducted in English. We will screen returned articles at the title and abstract level. Included articles will be screened at full text level and data coding will follow. Number of articles and reasons for excluding at full text level screening will be recorded. At each phase (title and abstract screening, full text screening, data coding), articles will be assessed independently by two members of the review team. Coded data will be reported in a narrative review and a database accessible through an open access, searchable data portal. We will summarize trends in the evidence base, identify interventions and outcomes where evidence can be further assessed in subsequent systematic reviews and where gaps in the literature exist, and discuss the implications of research gaps and gluts for TCME conservation policy, practice, and future research.
topic Ecosystem functions
Ecosystem services
Human well-being
Governance
Coral
Mangrove
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13750-020-00193-w
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