Published August 27, 2024 | Version publication2.0.0
Software Open

Data and code for "Protection efforts have resulted in ~10% of existing fish biomass on coral reefs"

  • 1. James Cook University
  • 1. ROR icon Wildlife Conservation Society
  • 2. ROR icon Lancaster University
  • 3. ROR icon University of Leeds
  • 4. ROR icon University of Queensland
  • 5. ROR icon Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
  • 6. ROR icon Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  • 7. ROR icon National Geographic Society
  • 8. ROR icon University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
  • 9. Université de la Nouvelle-Caledonie
  • 10. Alison Green Marine
  • 11. ROR icon University of Rhode Island
  • 12. OceanInk LLC
  • 13. University of California Santa Barbara
  • 14. MRAG Ltd
  • 15. Lancaster Environment Centre
  • 16. ES Caribbean
  • 17. James Cook University
  • 18. Environmental Defense Fund
  • 19. ROR icon University of California, Santa Barbara
  • 20. ROR icon University of Western Australia
  • 21. ROR icon Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions
  • 22. ROR icon Cabrillo College
  • 23. ROR icon University of Portsmouth
  • 24. ROR icon Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research
  • 25. ROR icon University of Bremen
  • 26. ROR icon Université de Montpellier
  • 27. ROR icon Institut Universitaire de France
  • 28. ROR icon University of Sydney

Description

Data and code for the study "Protection efforts have resulted in ~10% of existing fish biomass on coral reefs"

Abstract:
The amount of ocean protected from fishing and other human impacts has often been used as a metric of conservation progress. However, protection efforts have highly variable outcomes that depend on local conditions, which makes it difficult to quantify what coral reef protection efforts to date have actually achieved at a global scale. Here, we develop a predictive model of how local conditions influence conservation outcomes on ~2,600 coral reef sites across 44 ecoregions, which we used to quantify how much more fish biomass there is on coral reefs compared to a modeled scenario with no protection. Under the assumptions of our model, our study reveals that without existing protection efforts there would be ~10% less fish biomass on coral reefs. Thus, we estimate that coral reef protection efforts have led to approximately 1 in every 10 kg of existing fish biomass.

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Data.zip

Files (629.4 MB)

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md5:6396a9b370ae280e599fee8dab4a04ef
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md5:ffe247d3b6e38a812d70fd4f31b3ba9c
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md5:270c9f0b242eba1226143173cbbdb854
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