Modeling marine protected areas for threatened eiders in a climatically changing Bering Sea
Authored by James R Lovvorn, Samantha E Richman, Jacqueline M Grebmeier, Lee W Cooper, Joseph K Bump
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1890/08-1193.1
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Delineating protected areas for sensitive species is a growing challenge
as changing climate alters the geographic pattern of habitats as well as
human responses to those shifts. When human impacts are expected within
projected ranges of threatened species, there is often demand to
demarcate the minimum habitat required to ensure the species'
persistence. Because diminished or wide-ranging populations may not
occupy all viable (and needed) habitat at once, one must identify
thresholds of resources that will support the species even in unoccupied
areas. Long-term data on the shifting mosaic of critical resources may
indicate ranges of future variability. We addressed these issues for the
Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri), a federally threatened species
that winters in pack ice of the Bering Sea. Changing climate has
decreased ice cover and severely reduced the eiders' benthic prey and
has increased prospects for expansion of bottom trawling that may
further affect prey communities. To assess long-term changes in habitats
that will support eiders, we linked data on benthic prey, sea ice, and
weather from 1970 to 2001 with a spatially explicit simulation model of
eider energy balance that integrated field, laboratory, and
remote-sensing studies. Areas estimated to have prey densities adequate
for eiders in 1970-1974 did not include most areas that were viable 20
years later (1993-1994). Unless the entire area with adequate prey in
1993-1994 had been protected, the much reduced viable area in 1999-2001
might well have been excluded. During long non-foraging periods (as at
night), eiders can save much energy by resting on ice vs. floating on
water; thus, loss of ice cover in the future might substantially
decrease the area in which prey densities are adequate to offset the
eiders' energy needs. For wide-ranging benthivores such as eiders, our
results emphasize that fixed protected areas based on current conditions
can be too small or inflexible to subsume long-term shifts in habitat
conditions. Better knowledge of patterns of natural disturbance
experienced by prey communities, and appropriate allocation of human
disturbance over seasons or years, may yield alternative strategies to
large-scale closures that may be politically and economically
problematic.
Tags
Climate-change
Foraging behavior
Thermal substitution
Benthic communities
Wintering common-eiders
Somateria-mollissima
Spectacled eiders
Pack ice
Late summer
Swim speed