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  1. Article: Evaluating ecological states of rocky intertidal communities: A Best Professional Judgment exercise

    Murray, S.N / C.A. Bell / C.A. Blanchette / C.M. Miner / D.V. Richards / J.L. Burnaford / J.M. Engle / J.R. Smith / J.S. Pearse / K.J. Nielsen / M.N. Dethier / M.S. Foster / P.T. Raimondi / R.F. Ambrose / S.B. Weisberg

    Ecological indicators. 2016 Jan., v. 60

    2016  

    Abstract: A Best Professional Judgment (BPJ) exercise was performed to determine the level of agreement among experts in evaluating the ecological states of western North American rocky intertidal communities. Species-abundance and environmental data from 12 ... ...

    Abstract A Best Professional Judgment (BPJ) exercise was performed to determine the level of agreement among experts in evaluating the ecological states of western North American rocky intertidal communities. Species-abundance and environmental data from 12 central and 11 southern California sites were provided to 14 experts who independently ranked communities from best to worst and assigned each to one of five categories based on the degree of deviation from an expected natural biological state. Experts achieved Spearman correlations of 0.49 (central California) and 0.30 (southern California) in their rankings and averaged 75.4% and 70.0% Euclidean Similarity (ES) in their community evaluations. These ES values compare favorably with agreement levels found for similar exercises with soft bottom macroinvertebrate assemblages. The experts emphasized macrophytes with functional characteristics related to morphology and sessile macroinvertebrates in their assessments. Several challenges were noted in interpreting rocky intertidal data sets, the most prominent of which are high spatial and temporal variation and site-to-site differences in natural disturbance regimes, features that lead to multiple, expected community states. Experts required detailed, physical habitat descriptions to develop community composition expectations that differed for different shore types, and expressed concern about evaluating rocky intertidal communities based on only a single sampling event. Distinguishing natural from anthropogenic disturbance without information on the sources and magnitudes of anthropogenic perturbation was also found to be challenging because the biological responses to these stressors are often similar. This study underscores the need for long-term data sets that describe the dynamics of populations and communities and rigorous testing of expert judgments to firmly establish broadly applicable and consistent links between community states and anthropogenic stressors on rocky shores.
    Keywords anthropogenic activities ; anthropogenic stressors ; community structure ; data collection ; exercise ; experts ; functional properties ; habitats ; littoral zone ; macroinvertebrates ; macrophytes ; temporal variation ; California
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2016-01
    Size p. 802-814.
    Publishing place Elsevier Ltd
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2036774-0
    ISSN 1872-7034 ; 1470-160X
    ISSN (online) 1872-7034
    ISSN 1470-160X
    DOI 10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.08.017
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Evaluating ecological states of rocky intertidal communities: A Best Professional Judgment exercise

    Murray, S.N. / S.B. Weisberg / P.T. Raimondi / R.F. Ambrose / C.A. Bell / C.A. Blanchette / J.L. Burnaford / M.N. Dethier / J.M. Engle / M.S. Foster / C.M. Miner / K.J. Nielsen / J.S. Pearse / D.V. Richards / J.R. Smith

    Ecological indicators

    Volume v. 60

    Abstract: A Best Professional Judgment (BPJ) exercise was performed to determine the level of agreement among experts in evaluating the ecological states of western North American rocky intertidal communities. Species-abundance and environmental data from 12 ... ...

    Abstract A Best Professional Judgment (BPJ) exercise was performed to determine the level of agreement among experts in evaluating the ecological states of western North American rocky intertidal communities. Species-abundance and environmental data from 12 central and 11 southern California sites were provided to 14 experts who independently ranked communities from best to worst and assigned each to one of five categories based on the degree of deviation from an expected natural biological state. Experts achieved Spearman correlations of 0.49 (central California) and 0.30 (southern California) in their rankings and averaged 75.4% and 70.0% Euclidean Similarity (ES) in their community evaluations. These ES values compare favorably with agreement levels found for similar exercises with soft bottom macroinvertebrate assemblages. The experts emphasized macrophytes with functional characteristics related to morphology and sessile macroinvertebrates in their assessments. Several challenges were noted in interpreting rocky intertidal data sets, the most prominent of which are high spatial and temporal variation and site-to-site differences in natural disturbance regimes, features that lead to multiple, expected community states. Experts required detailed, physical habitat descriptions to develop community composition expectations that differed for different shore types, and expressed concern about evaluating rocky intertidal communities based on only a single sampling event. Distinguishing natural from anthropogenic disturbance without information on the sources and magnitudes of anthropogenic perturbation was also found to be challenging because the biological responses to these stressors are often similar. This study underscores the need for long-term data sets that describe the dynamics of populations and communities and rigorous testing of expert judgments to firmly establish broadly applicable and consistent links between community states and anthropogenic stressors on rocky shores.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 1470-160X
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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