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- Description:
Researchers applied methods developed to map cumulative impacts globally to the California Current using more comprehensive and higher-quality data for 25 human activities and 19 marine ecosystems.
They first surveyed experts in six sub-regions of the California Current to explore geographic variation in the effects of threats. A workshop was held to use decision theory to evaluate the tradeoffs of using expert opinion to assess threats and associated impacts. Data on ecosystems and threats were gathered at resolutions of approximately one square kilometer. By synthesizing information and inferences regarding anticipated impacts of threats, project participants developed a spatially-explicit understanding of the distribution and magnitude of human threats in the California Current. The analysis indicates where protection and threat mitigation are most needed in the California Current and reveals that coastal ecosystems near high human population density and the continental shelves off Oregon and Washington are the most heavily impacted. Climate change is the top threat, and impacts from multiple threats are ubiquitous. Remarkably, these results were highly spatially correlated with the global results for this region (R2=.92), suggesting that the global model provides guidance to areas without local data or resources to conduct similar regional-scale analyses.
Project collaborators are based at University of California, Santa Cruz; The Nature Conservancy; University of California, Santa Barbara; and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.
- Data Provided By:
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National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS), Benjamin S. Halpern, Carrie Kappel, Fio Micheli, Kim Selkoe
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ScienceBase (USGS)
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- Citation:
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Halpern, B. S., Kappel, C. V., Selkoe, K. A., Micheli, F., Ebert, C. M., Kontgis, C., Crain, C. M., Martone, R. G., Shearer, C. and Teck, S. J. (2009), Mapping cumulative human impacts to California Current marine ecosystems. Conservation Letters, 2: 138–148. doi: 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2009.00058.x
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
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http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/globalmarine/ca_current_data
About the Uploader
North Pacific LCC Data Coordinator
with NPLCC
The North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative promotes development, coordination, and dissemination of science to inform landscape level conservation and sustainable resource management in the face of a changing climate and related stressors