Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.

Overexploitation is a major threat for the integrity of marine ecosystems. Understanding the ecological consequences of different extractive practices and the mechanisms underlying the recovery of populations is essential to ensure sustainable management plans. Precious corals are long-lived structu...

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Main Authors: Ignasi Montero-Serra, Cristina Linares, Marina García, Francesca Pancaldi, Maša Frleta-Valić, Jean-Baptiste Ledoux, Frederic Zuberer, Djamel Merad, Pierre Drap, Joaquim Garrabou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4337904?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ac9769d0594341b38715b585d8f3e4d62020-11-25T02:52:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01102e011725010.1371/journal.pone.0117250Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.Ignasi Montero-SerraCristina LinaresMarina GarcíaFrancesca PancaldiMaša Frleta-ValićJean-Baptiste LedouxFrederic ZubererDjamel MeradPierre DrapJoaquim GarrabouOverexploitation is a major threat for the integrity of marine ecosystems. Understanding the ecological consequences of different extractive practices and the mechanisms underlying the recovery of populations is essential to ensure sustainable management plans. Precious corals are long-lived structural invertebrates, historically overfished, and their conservation is currently a worldwide concern. However, the processes underlying their recovery are poorly known. Here, we examined harvesting effects and recovery mechanisms of red coral Corallium rubrum by analyzing long-term photographic series taken on two populations that were harvested. We compared the relative importance of reproduction and re-growth as drivers of resilience. Harvesting heavily impacted coral populations causing large decreases in biomass and strong size-class distribution shifts towards populations dominated by small colonies. At the end of the study (after 4 and 7 years) only partial recovery was observed. The observed general pattern of low recruitment and high mortality of new recruits demonstrated limited effects of reproduction on population recovery. Adversely, low mortality of partially harvested adults and a large proportion of colonies showing new branches highlighted the importance of re-growth in the recovery process. The demographic projections obtained through stochastic models confirmed that the recovery rates of C. rubrum can be strongly modulated depending on harvesting procedures. Thus, leaving the basal section of the colonies when harvesting to avoid total mortality largely enhances the resilience of C. rubrum populations and quickens their recovery. On the other hand, the high survival of harvested colonies and the significant biomass reduction indicated that abundance may not be an adequate metric to assess the conservation status of clonal organisms because it can underestimate harvesting effects. This study highlights the unsustainability of current harvesting practices of C. rubrum and provides urgently needed data to improve management practices that are still largely based on untested assumptions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4337904?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ignasi Montero-Serra
Cristina Linares
Marina García
Francesca Pancaldi
Maša Frleta-Valić
Jean-Baptiste Ledoux
Frederic Zuberer
Djamel Merad
Pierre Drap
Joaquim Garrabou
spellingShingle Ignasi Montero-Serra
Cristina Linares
Marina García
Francesca Pancaldi
Maša Frleta-Valić
Jean-Baptiste Ledoux
Frederic Zuberer
Djamel Merad
Pierre Drap
Joaquim Garrabou
Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ignasi Montero-Serra
Cristina Linares
Marina García
Francesca Pancaldi
Maša Frleta-Valić
Jean-Baptiste Ledoux
Frederic Zuberer
Djamel Merad
Pierre Drap
Joaquim Garrabou
author_sort Ignasi Montero-Serra
title Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
title_short Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
title_full Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
title_fullStr Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
title_full_unstemmed Harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
title_sort harvesting effects, recovery mechanisms, and management strategies for a long-lived and structural precious coral.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Overexploitation is a major threat for the integrity of marine ecosystems. Understanding the ecological consequences of different extractive practices and the mechanisms underlying the recovery of populations is essential to ensure sustainable management plans. Precious corals are long-lived structural invertebrates, historically overfished, and their conservation is currently a worldwide concern. However, the processes underlying their recovery are poorly known. Here, we examined harvesting effects and recovery mechanisms of red coral Corallium rubrum by analyzing long-term photographic series taken on two populations that were harvested. We compared the relative importance of reproduction and re-growth as drivers of resilience. Harvesting heavily impacted coral populations causing large decreases in biomass and strong size-class distribution shifts towards populations dominated by small colonies. At the end of the study (after 4 and 7 years) only partial recovery was observed. The observed general pattern of low recruitment and high mortality of new recruits demonstrated limited effects of reproduction on population recovery. Adversely, low mortality of partially harvested adults and a large proportion of colonies showing new branches highlighted the importance of re-growth in the recovery process. The demographic projections obtained through stochastic models confirmed that the recovery rates of C. rubrum can be strongly modulated depending on harvesting procedures. Thus, leaving the basal section of the colonies when harvesting to avoid total mortality largely enhances the resilience of C. rubrum populations and quickens their recovery. On the other hand, the high survival of harvested colonies and the significant biomass reduction indicated that abundance may not be an adequate metric to assess the conservation status of clonal organisms because it can underestimate harvesting effects. This study highlights the unsustainability of current harvesting practices of C. rubrum and provides urgently needed data to improve management practices that are still largely based on untested assumptions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4337904?pdf=render
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