[OANNES Foro] Marine artificial micro-reserves: a possibility for the conservation of endangered species living on artificial substrata

Mario Cabrejos casal en infotex.com.pe
Jue Oct 14 17:56:02 PDT 2010


Marine Ecology
Article first published online: 12 OCT 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0485.2010.00409.x

Marine artificial micro-reserves: a possibility for the conservation of endangered species living on artificial substrata
José C. García-Gómez, Carlos M. López-Fé, Free Espinosa, José M. Guerra-García, Georgina A. Rivera-Ingraham

Laboratorio de Biología Marina, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain. Correspondence: Free Espinosa, Departamento de Fisiología y Zoología, Avenida Reina Mercedes 6, 41012 Sevilla, Spain. E-mail: free en us.es

Abstract

The installation of urban and commercial infrastructures on the coast has a severe impact on the marine environment. This impact is mostly negative but, simultaneously, some of the species that colonize artificial substrata (sometimes rare or threatened) find refuge in man-made structures. The protection of endangered species is usually provided by marine protected areas or by laws that punish their damage or collection, but effective enclosure and custody must be achieved in the case of easily accessible intertidal species. We used the ferruginous limpet, Patella ferruginea, as a case study because it is the most endangered invertebrate in the Mediterranean. This species, which lives in the intertidal zone and is very accessible to people, is a free-spawning, protandric hermaphrodite, highly dependent on population density and individual size for its reproductive success. Previous work by the authors found the species is especially abundant on artificial substrates on both shores of the Strait of Gibraltar, where people collect fewer of them. Spanish laws of coastal management do not allow the enclosure of the natural coastline, but artificial installations like harbour breakwaters may be closed or guarded, and visits for educational purposes may be carried out under control. The possibility of declaring some kind of environmental protection for these artificial areas would be a very helpful tool for conservation and management purposes. Protected individuals would grow larger and eventually produce exponentially more offspring, which could be transported by currents to adjacent habitats. Here we propose a protection concept for artificial sites termed Artificial Marine Micro-Reserve (AMMR), where some endangered species experience a refuge from human disturbance. This concept is a modification of the land micro-reserves that have been recently declared in small natural sites that keep rare plant species. A network of AMMRs would be the final objective, allowing the creation of a great metapopulation of P. ferruginea and also giving refuge to other endangered species that have been found to grow in this type of substratum. Critically, the declaration of a micro-reserve cannot be used as a reason in favour of new construction because of the negative influence of such structures on the marine environment, together with the fact that there is no certainty that valuable species will settle on them.
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