2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051615
|View full text |Cite|
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Increased Disease Calls for a Cost-Benefits Review of Marine Reserves

Abstract: Marine reserves (or No-Take Zones) are implemented to protect species and habitats, with the aim of restoring a balanced ecosystem. Although the benefits of marine reserves are commonly monitored, there is a lack of insight into the potential detriments of such highly protected waters. High population densities attained within reserves may induce negative impacts such as unfavourable trophic cascades and disease outbreaks. Hence, we investigated the health of lobster populations in the UK’s Marine Conservation… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1

Citation Types

0
25
0

Year Published

2014
2014
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

2
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 28 publications
(25 citation statements)
references
References 48 publications
(55 reference statements)
0
25
0
Order By: Relevance
“…These fi ndings are supported by Wootton et al ( 2012 ) who used similar methods to demonstrate positive effects of the Lundy NTZ on increased lobster abundance and size within the NTZ. • Wootton et al ( 2012 ) demonstrated the apparent negative effects of the NTZ including increased injury and shell disease.…”
Section: Marine Protected Areasmentioning
confidence: 53%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…These fi ndings are supported by Wootton et al ( 2012 ) who used similar methods to demonstrate positive effects of the Lundy NTZ on increased lobster abundance and size within the NTZ. • Wootton et al ( 2012 ) demonstrated the apparent negative effects of the NTZ including increased injury and shell disease.…”
Section: Marine Protected Areasmentioning
confidence: 53%
“…These fi ndings are supported by Wootton et al ( 2012 ) who used similar methods to demonstrate positive effects of the Lundy NTZ on increased lobster abundance and size within the NTZ. • Wootton et al ( 2012 ) demonstrated the apparent negative effects of the NTZ including increased injury and shell disease. Their study raised concerns about the impact that greater population densities has on disease outbreaks (% with disease), with evidence suggesting that high severity shell disease in the Lundy NTZ was signifi cantly associated with injury, for example injured male lobsters within the NTZ were over three times more likely to possess the high severity form of shell disease.…”
Section: Marine Protected Areasmentioning
confidence: 53%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Declines after fishery closure, transient or otherwise, might arise from a variety of dynamics, include age-structure-dependent processes given a delay to maturity (White et al 2013), stochastic recruitment (White & RogersBennett 2010, White et al 2013, and diseases with density-dependent spread (McCallum et al 2005, Wootton et al 2012 as well as predation (Micheli et al 2004b) and short-term trophic cascades (Frank et al 2011). Our results suggest that predation-driven transient declines are most likely for specialist predators due to the tight dynamic coupling with prey, predators with collapsed populations due to the greater lag in predation effect, and prey with slower life histories due to the resulting lag time in population dynamics.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the 55 United Kingdom, it is has also been detected in commercially 56 important species such as the European edible crab, C. pagurus 57 (Latrouite et al, 1988;Stentiford et al, 2002). Although detected 58 in the Norway lobster, Nephrops norvegicus (Field et al, 1992) (Wootton et al, 2011(Wootton et al, , 201267 Davies et al, 2015a,b 2) in which lobsters were monitored every 28 days (see Table S1, 97 Supplementary Materials for further detail of experimental design 98 and sampling regime). Chualáin et al, 2009;Smith et al, 2015), however it has also been 219 recorded in adult crabs in deeper waters (Chualáin, 2010 (Chatton and Poisson, 1931) in the Atlantic and Mediterranean and 227 Hematodinium australis (Hudson and Shields, 1994) that a certain specificity must be met in order for there to be a 247 resulting immune response (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%