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  1. Article ; Online: Minimizing wildlife impacts for offshore wind energy development: Winning tradeoffs for seabirds in space and cetaceans in time.

    Best, Benjamin D / Halpin, Patrick N

    PloS one

    2019  Volume 14, Issue 5, Page(s) e0215722

    Abstract: Although offshore wind energy development (OWED) offers a much-needed renewable energy alternative to fossil fuels, holistic and effective methods for evaluating environmental impacts on wildlife in both space and time have been lacking. The lengthy ... ...

    Abstract Although offshore wind energy development (OWED) offers a much-needed renewable energy alternative to fossil fuels, holistic and effective methods for evaluating environmental impacts on wildlife in both space and time have been lacking. The lengthy environmental compliance process, estimated to incur a 7-10 year permitting timeline [1], has been identified as a significant impediment to offshore energy development in U.S. waters. During operation, seabirds can collide and be displaced by turbines. During episodic pre-operation phases, cetaceans are most heavily impacted acoustically by pile driving (and similarly seismic air gun surveys for oil and gas exploration). The varying nature of impacts in space and time leads us to conclude that sites should be selected in space to minimize long-term operational impacts on seabirds, and timing of surveying and construction activities to be conducted in times of the year when sensitive migratory marine mammals are least present. We developed a novel spatiotemporal decision support framework that interactively visualizes tradeoffs between OWED industry profits and wildlife sensitivities, in both space and time. The framework highlights sites on a map that are the most profitable and least sensitive to seabirds. Within the U.S. Mid-Atlantic study area, the New York Call Areas are particularly well optimized for minimal impact on seabirds with maximal profits to OWED. For a given site, pre-operational activities (e.g. pile driving and seismic air gun surveying) are advised by cetacean sensitivity across months of the year that minimize impacts on migratory cetaceans, particularly those of highest conservation concern such as the North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena Glacialis). For instance, within optimal sites for the New York Call Area the least impacting months are May and June. Other taxa are certainly affected by OWED and should be incorporated into this framework, but data on their distributions and/or sensitivities is currently less well known. Built with open-source software made publicly available, the authors hope this framework will be extended even more comprehensively into the future as our knowledge on species distributions and OWED sensitivities expands for streamlining environmental compliance.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Birds ; Cetacea ; Conservation of Natural Resources/methods ; Environment ; Renewable Energy ; Spatio-Temporal Analysis ; Wind
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-05-14
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2267670-3
    ISSN 1932-6203 ; 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    ISSN 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0215722
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: A global database of intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs

    Ilieva, Iglika / Jouvet, Lionel / Seidelin, Lars / Best, Benjamin D. / Aldabet, Sofia / da Silva, Rita / Conde, Dalia A.

    Data in Brief. 2019 Apr., v. 23

    2019  

    Abstract: This paper contains data on intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs from 1942 to 2016. The deployment of decommissioned vessels and other available wrecks is a common practice in many coastal countries, such as the USA, Australia, ... ...

    Abstract This paper contains data on intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs from 1942 to 2016. The deployment of decommissioned vessels and other available wrecks is a common practice in many coastal countries, such as the USA, Australia, Malta, and New Zealand. We obtained data of georeferenced sites of wrecks from the scientific literature, local databases, and diving web sites published in the English language. Furthermore, we included information regarding the type of structure, location, depth, country, year of deployment and estimated life span. Moreover, we provide information on whether the wreck is located inside one of the World׳s Protected Areas, key biophysical Standard Level Data from the World Ocean Database, distance to reefs from the Coral Trait Database, and distances to 597 aquariums that are members of the Species360 global network of Aquariums and Zoological institutions, in the Zoological Information Management System (ZIMS). We provide data for wrecks with monitoring surveys in the peer-review literature, although these only comprise 2% of the records (36 of 1907 wrecks). The data we provide here can be used for research and evaluation of already deployed reefs, especially if combined with additional spatial information on biodiversity and threats.
    Keywords biodiversity ; databases ; georeferencing ; information management ; longevity ; management systems ; oceans ; research and development ; spatial data ; Australia ; Malta ; New Zealand
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2019-04
    Publishing place Elsevier Inc.
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2786545-9
    ISSN 2352-3409
    ISSN 2352-3409
    DOI 10.1016/j.dib.2018.12.023
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  3. Article ; Online: A global database of intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs.

    Ilieva, Iglika / Jouvet, Lionel / Seidelin, Lars / Best, Benjamin D / Aldabet, Sofia / da Silva, Rita / Conde, Dalia A

    Data in brief

    2018  Volume 23, Page(s) 103584

    Abstract: This paper contains data on intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs from 1942 to 2016. The deployment of decommissioned vessels and other available wrecks is a common practice in many coastal countries, such as the USA, Australia, ... ...

    Abstract This paper contains data on intentionally deployed wrecks to serve as artificial reefs from 1942 to 2016. The deployment of decommissioned vessels and other available wrecks is a common practice in many coastal countries, such as the USA, Australia, Malta, and New Zealand. We obtained data of georeferenced sites of wrecks from the scientific literature, local databases, and diving web sites published in the English language. Furthermore, we included information regarding the type of structure, location, depth, country, year of deployment and estimated life span. Moreover, we provide information on whether the wreck is located inside one of the World׳s Protected Areas, key biophysical Standard Level Data from the World Ocean Database, distance to reefs from the Coral Trait Database, and distances to 597 aquariums that are members of the Species360 global network of Aquariums and Zoological institutions, in the Zoological Information Management System (ZIMS). We provide data for wrecks with monitoring surveys in the peer-review literature, although these only comprise 2% of the records (36 of 1907 wrecks). The data we provide here can be used for research and evaluation of already deployed reefs, especially if combined with additional spatial information on biodiversity and threats.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-12-29
    Publishing country Netherlands
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2786545-9
    ISSN 2352-3409 ; 2352-3409
    ISSN (online) 2352-3409
    ISSN 2352-3409
    DOI 10.1016/j.dib.2018.12.023
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article: Are all seeds equal? Spatially explicit comparisons of seed fall and sapling recruitment in a tropical forest

    Swamy, Varun / Terborgh, John / Dexter, Kyle G / Best, Benjamin D / Alvarez, Patricia / Cornejo, Fernando

    Ecology letters. 2011 Feb., v. 14, no. 2

    2011  

    Abstract: Ecology Letters (2011) 14: 195-201 ABSTRACT: Understanding demographic transitions may provide the key to explain the high diversity of tropical tree communities. In a faunally intact Amazonian forest, we compared the spatial distribution of saplings of ... ...

    Abstract Ecology Letters (2011) 14: 195-201 ABSTRACT: Understanding demographic transitions may provide the key to explain the high diversity of tropical tree communities. In a faunally intact Amazonian forest, we compared the spatial distribution of saplings of 15 common tree species with patterns of conspecific seed fall, and examined the seed-to-sapling transition in relation to locations of conspecific trees. In all species, the spatial pattern of sapling recruitment bore no resemblance to predicted distributions based on the density of seed fall. Seed efficiency (the probability of a seed producing a sapling) is strongly correlated with distance from large conspecific trees, with a > 30-fold multiplicative increase between recruitment zones that are most distant vs. proximal to conspecific adults. The striking decoupling of sapling recruitment and conspecific seed density patterns indicates near-complete recruitment failure in areas of high seed density located around reproductive adults. Our results provide strong support for the spatially explicit predictions of the Janzen-Connell hypothesis.
    Keywords adults ; probability ; recruitment ; saplings ; seeds ; tropical forests
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2011-02
    Size p. 195-201.
    Publishing place Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1441608-6
    ISSN 1461-0248 ; 1461-023X
    ISSN (online) 1461-0248
    ISSN 1461-023X
    DOI 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2010.01571.x
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  5. Article: Best practices for assessing ocean health in multiple contexts using tailorable frameworks.

    Lowndes, Julia S Stewart / Pacheco, Erich J / Best, Benjamin D / Scarborough, Courtney / Longo, Catherine / Katona, Steven K / Halpern, Benjamin S

    PeerJ

    2015  Volume 3, Page(s) e1503

    Abstract: Marine policy is increasingly calling for maintaining or restoring healthy oceans while human activities continue to intensify. Thus, successful prioritization and management of competing objectives requires a comprehensive assessment of the current ... ...

    Abstract Marine policy is increasingly calling for maintaining or restoring healthy oceans while human activities continue to intensify. Thus, successful prioritization and management of competing objectives requires a comprehensive assessment of the current state of the ocean. Unfortunately, assessment frameworks to define and quantify current ocean state are often site-specific, limited to a few ocean components, and difficult to reproduce in different geographies or even through time, limiting spatial or temporal comparisons as well as the potential for shared learning. Ideally, frameworks should be tailorable to accommodate use in disparate locations and contexts, removing the need to develop frameworks de novo and allowing efforts to focus on the assessments themselves to advise action. Here, we present some of our experiences using the Ocean Health Index (OHI) framework, a tailorable and repeatable approach that measures health of coupled human-ocean ecosystems in different contexts by accommodating differences in local environmental characteristics, cultural priorities, and information availability and quality. Since its development in 2012, eleven assessments using the OHI framework have been completed at global, national, and regional scales, four of which have been led by independent academic or government groups. We have found the following to be best practices for conducting assessments: Incorporate key characteristics and priorities into the assessment framework design before gathering information; Strategically define spatial boundaries to balance information availability and decision-making scales; Maintain the key characteristics and priorities of the assessment framework regardless of information limitations; and Document and share the assessment process, methods, and tools. These best practices are relevant to most ecosystem assessment processes, but also provide tangible guidance for assessments using the OHI framework. These recommendations also promote transparency around which decisions were made and why, reproducibility through access to detailed methods and computational code, repeatability via the ability to modify methods and computational code, and ease of communication to wide audiences, all of which are critical for any robust assessment process.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-12-10
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2703241-3
    ISSN 2167-8359
    ISSN 2167-8359
    DOI 10.7717/peerj.1503
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: A regional-scale Ocean Health Index for Brazil.

    Elfes, Cristiane T / Longo, Catherine / Halpern, Benjamin S / Hardy, Darren / Scarborough, Courtney / Best, Benjamin D / Pinheiro, Tiago / Dutra, Guilherme F

    PloS one

    2014  Volume 9, Issue 4, Page(s) e92589

    Abstract: Brazil has one of the largest and fastest growing economies and one of the largest coastlines in the world, making human use and enjoyment of coastal and marine resources of fundamental importance to the country. Integrated assessments of ocean health ... ...

    Abstract Brazil has one of the largest and fastest growing economies and one of the largest coastlines in the world, making human use and enjoyment of coastal and marine resources of fundamental importance to the country. Integrated assessments of ocean health are needed to understand the condition of a range of benefits that humans derive from marine systems and to evaluate where attention should be focused to improve the health of these systems. Here we describe the first such assessment for Brazil at both national and state levels. We applied the Ocean Health Index framework, which evaluates ten public goals for healthy oceans. Despite refinements of input data and model formulations, the national score of 60 (out of 100) was highly congruent with the previous global assessment for Brazil of 62. Variability in scores among coastal states was most striking for goals related to mariculture, protected areas, tourism, and clean waters. Extractive goals, including Food Provision, received low scores relative to habitat-related goals, such as Biodiversity. This study demonstrates the applicability of the Ocean Health Index at a regional scale, and its usefulness in highlighting existing data and knowledge gaps and identifying key policy and management recommendations. To improve Brazil's ocean health, this study suggests that future actions should focus on: enhancing fisheries management, expanding marine protected areas, and monitoring coastal habitats.
    MeSH term(s) Brazil ; Demography ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Models, Biological ; Oceans and Seas
    Language English
    Publishing date 2014-04-02
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ISSN 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0092589
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Our path to better science in less time using open data science tools.

    Lowndes, Julia S Stewart / Best, Benjamin D / Scarborough, Courtney / Afflerbach, Jamie C / Frazier, Melanie R / O'Hara, Casey C / Jiang, Ning / Halpern, Benjamin S

    Nature ecology & evolution

    2017  Volume 1, Issue 6, Page(s) 160

    Abstract: Reproducibility has long been a tenet of science but has been challenging to achieve-we learned this the hard way when our old approaches proved inadequate to efficiently reproduce our own work. Here we describe how several free software tools have ... ...

    Abstract Reproducibility has long been a tenet of science but has been challenging to achieve-we learned this the hard way when our old approaches proved inadequate to efficiently reproduce our own work. Here we describe how several free software tools have fundamentally upgraded our approach to collaborative research, making our entire workflow more transparent and streamlined. By describing specific tools and how we incrementally began using them for the Ocean Health Index project, we hope to encourage others in the scientific community to do the same-so we can all produce better science in less time.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2017-05-23
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 2397-334X
    ISSN (online) 2397-334X
    DOI 10.1038/s41559-017-0160
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Are all seeds equal? Spatially explicit comparisons of seed fall and sapling recruitment in a tropical forest.

    Swamy, Varun / Terborgh, John / Dexter, Kyle G / Best, Benjamin D / Alvarez, Patricia / Cornejo, Fernando

    Ecology letters

    2011  Volume 14, Issue 2, Page(s) 195–201

    Abstract: Understanding demographic transitions may provide the key to explain the high diversity of tropical tree communities. In a faunally intact Amazonian forest, we compared the spatial distribution of saplings of 15 common tree species with patterns of ... ...

    Abstract Understanding demographic transitions may provide the key to explain the high diversity of tropical tree communities. In a faunally intact Amazonian forest, we compared the spatial distribution of saplings of 15 common tree species with patterns of conspecific seed fall, and examined the seed-to-sapling transition in relation to locations of conspecific trees. In all species, the spatial pattern of sapling recruitment bore no resemblance to predicted distributions based on the density of seed fall. Seed efficiency (the probability of a seed producing a sapling) is strongly correlated with distance from large conspecific trees, with a >30-fold multiplicative increase between recruitment zones that are most distant vs. proximal to conspecific adults. The striking decoupling of sapling recruitment and conspecific seed density patterns indicates near-complete recruitment failure in areas of high seed density located around reproductive adults. Our results provide strong support for the spatially explicit predictions of the Janzen-Connell hypothesis.
    MeSH term(s) Ecosystem ; Peru ; Population Dynamics ; Seedlings/growth & development ; Seeds/growth & development ; Trees/growth & development ; Tropical Climate
    Language English
    Publishing date 2011-02
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
    ZDB-ID 1441608-6
    ISSN 1461-0248 ; 1461-023X
    ISSN (online) 1461-0248
    ISSN 1461-023X
    DOI 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2010.01571.x
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: Patterns and emerging trends in global ocean health.

    Halpern, Benjamin S / Longo, Catherine / Lowndes, Julia S Stewart / Best, Benjamin D / Frazier, Melanie / Katona, Steven K / Kleisner, Kristin M / Rosenberg, Andrew A / Scarborough, Courtney / Selig, Elizabeth R

    PloS one

    2015  Volume 10, Issue 3, Page(s) e0117863

    Abstract: International and regional policies aimed at managing ocean ecosystem health need quantitative and comprehensive indices to synthesize information from a variety of sources, consistently measure progress, and communicate with key constituencies and the ... ...

    Abstract International and regional policies aimed at managing ocean ecosystem health need quantitative and comprehensive indices to synthesize information from a variety of sources, consistently measure progress, and communicate with key constituencies and the public. Here we present the second annual global assessment of the Ocean Health Index, reporting current scores and annual changes since 2012, recalculated using updated methods and data based on the best available science, for 221 coastal countries and territories. The Index measures performance of ten societal goals for healthy oceans on a quantitative scale of increasing health from 0 to 100, and combines these scores into a single Index score, for each country and globally. The global Index score improved one point (from 67 to 68), while many country-level Index and goal scores had larger changes. Per-country Index scores ranged from 41-95 and, on average, improved by 0.06 points (range -8 to +12). Globally, average scores increased for individual goals by as much as 6.5 points (coastal economies) and decreased by as much as 1.2 points (natural products). Annual updates of the Index, even when not all input data have been updated, provide valuable information to scientists, policy makers, and resource managers because patterns and trends can emerge from the data that have been updated. Changes of even a few points indicate potential successes (when scores increase) that merit recognition, or concerns (when scores decrease) that may require mitigative action, with changes of more than 10-20 points representing large shifts that deserve greater attention. Goal scores showed remarkably little covariance across regions, indicating low redundancy in the Index, such that each goal delivers information about a different facet of ocean health. Together these scores provide a snapshot of global ocean health and suggest where countries have made progress and where a need for further improvement exists.
    MeSH term(s) Conservation of Natural Resources ; Ecological and Environmental Phenomena ; Ecosystem ; Fisheries ; Internationality ; Oceans and Seas
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015-03-16
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ISSN 1932-6203
    ISSN (online) 1932-6203
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0117863
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article ; Online: Data-driven approach for highlighting priority areas for protection in marine areas beyond national jurisdiction

    Visalli, Morgan E. / Best, Benjamin D. / Cabral, Reniel B. / Cheung, William W.L. / Clark, Nichola A. / Garilao, Cristina / Kaschner, Kristin / Kesner-Reyes, Kathleen / Lam, Vicky W.Y. / Maxwell, Sara M. / Mayorga, Juan / Moeller, Holly V. / Morgan, Lance / Crespo, Guillermo Ortuño / Pinsky, Malin L. / White, Timothy D. / McCauley, Douglas J.

    2020  

    Abstract: One of the aims of the United Nations (UN) negotiations on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ) is to develop a legal process for the establishment of area-based management tools, ... ...

    Abstract One of the aims of the United Nations (UN) negotiations on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ) is to develop a legal process for the establishment of area-based management tools, including marine protected areas, in ABNJ. Here we use a conservation planning algorithm to integrate 55 global data layers on ABNJ species diversity, habitat heterogeneity, benthic features, productivity, and fishing as a means for highlighting priority regions in ABNJ to be considered for spatial protection. We also include information on forecasted species distributions under climate change. We found that parameterizing the planning algorithm to protect at least 30% of these key ABNJ conservation features, while avoiding areas of high fishing effort, yielded a solution that highlights 52,545,634 km2 (23.7%) of ABNJ as high priority regions for protection. Instructing the planning model to avoid ABNJ areas with high fishing effort resulted in relatively minor shifts in the planning solution, when compared to a separate model that did not consider fishing effort. Integrating information on climate change had a similarly minor influence on the planning solution, suggesting that climate-informed ABNJ protected areas may be able to protect biodiversity now and in the future. This globally standardized, data-driven process for identifying priority ABNJ regions for protection serves as a valuable complement to other expert-driven processes underway to highlight ecologically or biologically significant ABNJ regions. Both the outputs and methods exhibited in this analysis can additively inform UN decision-making concerning establishment of ABNJ protected areas.
    Subject code 333
    Language English
    Publisher Elsevier
    Publishing country de
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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