Skip to navigation, main content, secondary content or to search.
NCEAS
NCEAS Project 10281
Conservation planning for ecosystem functioning: Testing predictions of ecological effectiveness for marine predators (EBM)
- Doak, Daniel
- Estes, James
- Wootton, J. Timothy
- Williams, Terrie
Ecosystem Based Management Web Site
| Activity | Dates | Further Information |
|---|---|---|
| Working Group | 3rd—6th March 2006 | Participant List |
| Working Group | 13th—17th October 2006 | Participant List Agenda |
| Working Group | 9th—12th March 2007 | Participant List |
| Working Group | 3rd—7th November 2007 | Participant List |
| Working Group | 25th—29th April 2008 | Participant List |
Abstract
At a major symposium on marine ecosystem-based management at the 2005 AAAS meetings, one of the three principal themes deemed critical for future progress was interaction web dynamics?the way in which species interact with one another and their physical environment. In particular, the scientific basis for marine ecosystem-based management must better incorporate understanding of the influences of multiple predator species on interaction web dynamics. These interactions are increasingly recognized as critical to the maintenance and restoration of marine communities and hence to the planning of marine reserves and other conservation strategies. Our working group will directly tackle this important issue, asking what approaches are most successful in estimating the interaction strength, also termed ecological effectiveness, of predator species on nearshore communities and how to use limited information on these effects to best conduct conservation planning in these ecosystems. We will focus our initial efforts on three extremely well-studied predator guilds of West Coast, near shore communities: sea otters in kelp forests; predatory whelks in mid-intertidal benthic communities, and wading shore birds in high to mid intertidal communities. For each of these very different systems, extensive data exist on the effects of predator abundance, physiology, and individual behavior. We will assemble these diverse data sets and use them to develop detailed interaction models as well as more broad-brush models that may be applicable to less-well-studied communities. Our overall goal is to use these models to ask what aspects of predator physiology and behavior, and what aspects of prey community structure, most determine the ecological effectiveness of predators and thus must be understood in order to plan viable marine conservation strategies.
| Type | Product of NCEAS Research |
|---|---|
| Publication | Doak, Daniel F.; Estes, James A.; Halpern, Benjamin S.; Jacob, Ute; Lindberg, David R.; Lovvorn, James R.; Monson, Daniel H.; Tinker, M. Timothy; Williams, Terrie; Wootton, J. Timothy; Carroll, Ian; Emmerson, Mark C.; Micheli, Fiorenza; Novak, Mark. 2008. Understanding and predicting ecological dynamics: Are major surprises inevitable?. Ecology. Pages 952-961. |


