Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example

Society relies on intact marine ecosystems for ecosystem services such as nutrition, livelihoods, health and well-being. Yet, to obtain these benefits, we carry out activities, introducing pressures to ecosystems, damaging and degrading habitats and reducing their capacity to optimally provide ecosy...

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Main Authors: Culhane, Fiona, Austen, Melanie C., Ashley, Matthew, Javier, Jonson, Kuit, Sui Hyang, Hung, Nguyen Phuc, Tran, Hau Duc, Praptiwi, Radisti A., Sainal, Sainal, Justine, Eva, Wulandari, Prawesti, Broszeit, Stefanie, Jontila, Jean Beth, Johari, Sofia, Creencia, Lota, Then, Amy Yee Hui, Gajardo, Lea Janine, Maharja, Carya, Goh, Hong Ching, Syazwan, Wan Mohd, Affendi, Yang Amri, Thảo, Lê Ngọc, Sugardjito, Jito, Mullier, Tom, Langmead, Olivia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons Inc 2024
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/1/120229.pdf
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author Culhane, Fiona
Austen, Melanie C.
Ashley, Matthew
Javier, Jonson
Kuit, Sui Hyang
Hung, Nguyen Phuc
Tran, Hau Duc
Praptiwi, Radisti A.
Sainal, Sainal
Justine, Eva
Wulandari, Prawesti
Broszeit, Stefanie
Jontila, Jean Beth
Johari, Sofia
Creencia, Lota
Then, Amy Yee Hui
Gajardo, Lea Janine
Maharja, Carya
Goh, Hong Ching
Syazwan, Wan Mohd
Affendi, Yang Amri
Thảo, Lê Ngọc
Sugardjito, Jito
Mullier, Tom
Langmead, Olivia
author_facet Culhane, Fiona
Austen, Melanie C.
Ashley, Matthew
Javier, Jonson
Kuit, Sui Hyang
Hung, Nguyen Phuc
Tran, Hau Duc
Praptiwi, Radisti A.
Sainal, Sainal
Justine, Eva
Wulandari, Prawesti
Broszeit, Stefanie
Jontila, Jean Beth
Johari, Sofia
Creencia, Lota
Then, Amy Yee Hui
Gajardo, Lea Janine
Maharja, Carya
Goh, Hong Ching
Syazwan, Wan Mohd
Affendi, Yang Amri
Thảo, Lê Ngọc
Sugardjito, Jito
Mullier, Tom
Langmead, Olivia
author_sort Culhane, Fiona
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Society relies on intact marine ecosystems for ecosystem services such as nutrition, livelihoods, health and well-being. Yet, to obtain these benefits, we carry out activities, introducing pressures to ecosystems, damaging and degrading habitats and reducing their capacity to optimally provide ecosystem services. Biodiversity and ecosystem services are consequently being lost globally but impact chains from these activities are poorly understood, especially in tropical marine ecosystems. We identified for the first time impact chains linking activities with pressures they introduce in five tropical coastal and marine habitats, specifically through application in four Southeast Asian case study sites. Using expert elicitation based on existing evidence, we weighted each impact chain according to pressure extent, frequency and persistence, and habitat resistance and resilience. Assigning each impact chain an impact risk score allowed identification of activities and pressures introducing most risk, and habitats most under threat. Of 26 activities we considered, we found fishing activities, specifically trawling, gill nets and seine nets introduce most risk, along with tourism and recreation. Litter and pollution were among the greatest pressures on habitats, with coral reefs being most vulnerable overall. Destructive fishing practices were associated with physical pressures like abrasion, smothering and siltation and total habitat loss, while tourism activities were associated with organic enrichment, litter and pollution. The risk levels depended on the habitat and on local case study context. Synthesis and applications: A contextualised risk-based approach can help to prioritise sustainability issues for management in data-poor regions by making use of a range of knowledge types from local experts to broader scientific knowledge. A multisectoral, and ecosystem-based risk assessment can help decision makers to consider trade-offs in marine resource management and highlight priorities transparently, where coordination of multiple administrative organisations, sectors and local actors is required to meet multiple sustainability objectives. Physical pressures from fishing activities combined with pollution from tourism indicate effective management requires a multi-use zoning approach that not only considers impacts at the site of activities but also integrates regional coordination to tackle dispersive pressures from pollution or sediment disturbance that occur at a distance from the source.
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spelling upm-1202292025-09-25T09:12:03Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/ Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example Culhane, Fiona Austen, Melanie C. Ashley, Matthew Javier, Jonson Kuit, Sui Hyang Hung, Nguyen Phuc Tran, Hau Duc Praptiwi, Radisti A. Sainal, Sainal Justine, Eva Wulandari, Prawesti Broszeit, Stefanie Jontila, Jean Beth Johari, Sofia Creencia, Lota Then, Amy Yee Hui Gajardo, Lea Janine Maharja, Carya Goh, Hong Ching Syazwan, Wan Mohd Affendi, Yang Amri Thảo, Lê Ngọc Sugardjito, Jito Mullier, Tom Langmead, Olivia Society relies on intact marine ecosystems for ecosystem services such as nutrition, livelihoods, health and well-being. Yet, to obtain these benefits, we carry out activities, introducing pressures to ecosystems, damaging and degrading habitats and reducing their capacity to optimally provide ecosystem services. Biodiversity and ecosystem services are consequently being lost globally but impact chains from these activities are poorly understood, especially in tropical marine ecosystems. We identified for the first time impact chains linking activities with pressures they introduce in five tropical coastal and marine habitats, specifically through application in four Southeast Asian case study sites. Using expert elicitation based on existing evidence, we weighted each impact chain according to pressure extent, frequency and persistence, and habitat resistance and resilience. Assigning each impact chain an impact risk score allowed identification of activities and pressures introducing most risk, and habitats most under threat. Of 26 activities we considered, we found fishing activities, specifically trawling, gill nets and seine nets introduce most risk, along with tourism and recreation. Litter and pollution were among the greatest pressures on habitats, with coral reefs being most vulnerable overall. Destructive fishing practices were associated with physical pressures like abrasion, smothering and siltation and total habitat loss, while tourism activities were associated with organic enrichment, litter and pollution. The risk levels depended on the habitat and on local case study context. Synthesis and applications: A contextualised risk-based approach can help to prioritise sustainability issues for management in data-poor regions by making use of a range of knowledge types from local experts to broader scientific knowledge. A multisectoral, and ecosystem-based risk assessment can help decision makers to consider trade-offs in marine resource management and highlight priorities transparently, where coordination of multiple administrative organisations, sectors and local actors is required to meet multiple sustainability objectives. Physical pressures from fishing activities combined with pollution from tourism indicate effective management requires a multi-use zoning approach that not only considers impacts at the site of activities but also integrates regional coordination to tackle dispersive pressures from pollution or sediment disturbance that occur at a distance from the source. John Wiley and Sons Inc 2024 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/1/120229.pdf Culhane, Fiona and Austen, Melanie C. and Ashley, Matthew and Javier, Jonson and Kuit, Sui Hyang and Hung, Nguyen Phuc and Tran, Hau Duc and Praptiwi, Radisti A. and Sainal, Sainal and Justine, Eva and Wulandari, Prawesti and Broszeit, Stefanie and Jontila, Jean Beth and Johari, Sofia and Creencia, Lota and Then, Amy Yee Hui and Gajardo, Lea Janine and Maharja, Carya and Goh, Hong Ching and Syazwan, Wan Mohd and Affendi, Yang Amri and Thảo, Lê Ngọc and Sugardjito, Jito and Mullier, Tom and Langmead, Olivia (2024) Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example. Journal of Applied Ecology, 61 (12). art. no. undefined. pp. 2897-2911. ISSN 0021-8901; eISSN: 1365-2664 https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.14812 10.1111/1365-2664.14812
spellingShingle Culhane, Fiona
Austen, Melanie C.
Ashley, Matthew
Javier, Jonson
Kuit, Sui Hyang
Hung, Nguyen Phuc
Tran, Hau Duc
Praptiwi, Radisti A.
Sainal, Sainal
Justine, Eva
Wulandari, Prawesti
Broszeit, Stefanie
Jontila, Jean Beth
Johari, Sofia
Creencia, Lota
Then, Amy Yee Hui
Gajardo, Lea Janine
Maharja, Carya
Goh, Hong Ching
Syazwan, Wan Mohd
Affendi, Yang Amri
Thảo, Lê Ngọc
Sugardjito, Jito
Mullier, Tom
Langmead, Olivia
Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title_full Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title_fullStr Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title_full_unstemmed Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title_short Assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a Southeast Asian example
title_sort assessing impact risk to tropical marine ecosystems from human activities with a southeast asian example
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/120229/1/120229.pdf