@article{4e70cc42755842eda965977efdbc9866,
title = "Trait groups as management entities in a complex, multispecies reef fishery",
abstract = "Localized stressors compound the ongoing climate-driven decline of coral reefs, requiring natural resource managers to work with rapidly shifting paradigms. Trait-based adaptive management (TBAM) is a new framework to help address changing conditions by choosing and implementing management actions specific to species groups that share key traits, vulnerabilities, and management responses. In TBAM maintenance of functioning ecosystems is balanced with provisioning for human subsistence and livelihoods. We first identified trait-based groups of food fish in a Pacific coral reef with hierarchical clustering. Positing that trait-based groups performing comparable functions respond similarly to both stressors and management actions, we ascertained biophysical and socioeconomic drivers of trait-group biomass and evaluated their vulnerabilities with generalized additive models. Clustering identified 7 trait groups from 131 species. Groups responded to different drivers and displayed divergent vulnerabilities; human activities emerged as important predictors of community structuring. Biomass of small, solitary reef-associated species increased with distance from key fishing ports, and large, solitary piscivores exhibited a decline in biomass with distance from a port. Group biomass also varied in response to different habitat types, the presence or absence of reported dynamite fishing activity, and exposure to wave energy. The differential vulnerabilities of trait groups revealed how the community structure of food fishes is driven by different aspects of resource use and habitat. This inherent variability in the responses of trait-based groups presents opportunities to apply selective TBAM strategies for complex, multispecies fisheries. This approach can be widely adjusted to suit local contexts and priorities.",
keywords = "caracteres, coral reef fish, fisheries, funciones, functions, manejo adaptativo basado en atributos, Micronesia, peces de arrecife de coral, pesquer{\'i}as, TBAM, trait-based adaptive management, traits",
author = "Louise Anderson and Peter Houk and Miller, {Mark G.R.} and Javier Cuetos-Bueno and Curtis Graham and Kriskitina Kanemoto and Elizabeth Terk and Elizabeth McLeod and Maria Beger",
note = "Funding Information: We are grateful to the Chuuk Department of Marine Resources, Chuuk Conservation Society, Chuuk Women's Council, and The Nature Conservancy Micronesia for their assistance in developing this work. We are particularly thankful to community members in Chuuk who generously shared their insights throughout. We thank A. Dunn and C. Quinn for early manuscript feedback. L.A. was funded by the Faculty Leeds Doctoral Scholarship and a Priestley International Centre for Climate bursary. This project also received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sk{\l}odowska‐Curie grant agreement TRIM‐DLV‐747102 to M.B. This publication makes use of data provided by the Micronesia Coral Reef Monitoring Program and the Chuuk Department of Marine Resources. The analyses and interpretations presented here are solely those of the authors. Funding Information: We are grateful to the Chuuk Department of Marine Resources, Chuuk Conservation Society, Chuuk Women's Council, and The Nature Conservancy Micronesia for their assistance in developing this work. We are particularly thankful to community members in Chuuk who generously shared their insights throughout. We thank A. Dunn and C. Quinn for early manuscript feedback. L.A. was funded by the Faculty Leeds Doctoral Scholarship and a Priestley International Centre for Climate bursary. This project also received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sk{\l}odowska-Curie grant agreement TRIM-DLV-747102 to M.B. This publication makes use of data provided by the Micronesia Coral Reef Monitoring Program and the Chuuk Department of Marine Resources. The analyses and interpretations presented here are solely those of the authors. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 Society for Conservation Biology.",
year = "2022",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/cobi.13866",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
journal = "Conservation Biology",
issn = "0888-8892",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",
}