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Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna

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Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna. / Trevail, Alice M.; Dunn, Ruth E.; Carr, Peter et al.
In: Journal of Applied Ecology, 06.08.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Trevail, AM, Dunn, RE, Carr, P, Esteban, N, Freeman, R, Harris, JL, Nicoll, MAC, Stephens, N, Stevens, GMW, Votier, SC, Wood, H & Hays, GC 2025, 'Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna', Journal of Applied Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70117

APA

Trevail, A. M., Dunn, R. E., Carr, P., Esteban, N., Freeman, R., Harris, J. L., Nicoll, M. A. C., Stephens, N., Stevens, G. M. W., Votier, S. C., Wood, H., & Hays, G. C. (2025). Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna. Journal of Applied Ecology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70117

Vancouver

Trevail AM, Dunn RE, Carr P, Esteban N, Freeman R, Harris JL et al. Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna. Journal of Applied Ecology. 2025 Aug 6. Epub 2025 Aug 6. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.70117

Author

Trevail, Alice M. ; Dunn, Ruth E. ; Carr, Peter et al. / Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna. In: Journal of Applied Ecology. 2025.

Bibtex

@article{8fac4cc2a13e46bebbcf2ecb75e941d7,
title = "Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna",
abstract = "Global calls for greater ocean protection have sparked renewed interest in very large marine protected areas (VLMPAs, >100,000 km2) to achieve management targets; however, their conservation value is debated. We assessed the suitability of a VLMPA (640,000 km2) in the Indian Ocean for capturing the movements of resident mobile marine megafauna. We found that 95% of foraging, breeding and/or locally migrating individuals occurred within the VLMPA despite variable habitat use; adult hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata, n = 22, 6124 tracking days) foraged on mesophotic banks (>30 m depth), reef manta rays (Mobula alfredi, n = 23, 652 tracking days) used shallow submerged banks, and seabirds (red‐footed boobies Sula sula, brown boobies Sula leucogaster, wedge‐tailed shearwaters Ardenna pacifica, n = 257, 1084 tracking days) collectively foraged throughout coastal to pelagic waters. To understand the size of MPA necessary to encompass resident mobile species, we assessed overlap with smaller and larger hypothetical MPAs. An MPA meeting the minimum threshold of a VLMPA (>100,000 km2) would encompass 97% of manta and 94% of turtle locations, and 59% of all seabird locations because of their more pelagic distribution. Synthesis and applications. Our results provide clear evidence for the value of the large scale of the Chagos Archipelago very large marine protected area for protection of taxonomically diverse mobile megafauna. Further, we highlight the value of the VLMPA approach as a strategy towards achieving 30% ocean protection by 2030.",
keywords = "biologging, chagos archipelago, movement ecology, turtles, marine conservation, MPA, manta ray, seabirds",
author = "Trevail, {Alice M.} and Dunn, {Ruth E.} and Peter Carr and Nicole Esteban and Robin Freeman and Harris, {Joanna L.} and Nicoll, {Malcolm A. C.} and Nia Stephens and Stevens, {Guy M. W.} and Votier, {Stephen C.} and Hannah Wood and Hays, {Graeme C.}",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1111/1365-2664.70117",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Applied Ecology",
issn = "0021-8901",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Large marine protected areas can encompass movements of diverse megafauna

AU - Trevail, Alice M.

AU - Dunn, Ruth E.

AU - Carr, Peter

AU - Esteban, Nicole

AU - Freeman, Robin

AU - Harris, Joanna L.

AU - Nicoll, Malcolm A. C.

AU - Stephens, Nia

AU - Stevens, Guy M. W.

AU - Votier, Stephen C.

AU - Wood, Hannah

AU - Hays, Graeme C.

PY - 2025/8/6

Y1 - 2025/8/6

N2 - Global calls for greater ocean protection have sparked renewed interest in very large marine protected areas (VLMPAs, >100,000 km2) to achieve management targets; however, their conservation value is debated. We assessed the suitability of a VLMPA (640,000 km2) in the Indian Ocean for capturing the movements of resident mobile marine megafauna. We found that 95% of foraging, breeding and/or locally migrating individuals occurred within the VLMPA despite variable habitat use; adult hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata, n = 22, 6124 tracking days) foraged on mesophotic banks (>30 m depth), reef manta rays (Mobula alfredi, n = 23, 652 tracking days) used shallow submerged banks, and seabirds (red‐footed boobies Sula sula, brown boobies Sula leucogaster, wedge‐tailed shearwaters Ardenna pacifica, n = 257, 1084 tracking days) collectively foraged throughout coastal to pelagic waters. To understand the size of MPA necessary to encompass resident mobile species, we assessed overlap with smaller and larger hypothetical MPAs. An MPA meeting the minimum threshold of a VLMPA (>100,000 km2) would encompass 97% of manta and 94% of turtle locations, and 59% of all seabird locations because of their more pelagic distribution. Synthesis and applications. Our results provide clear evidence for the value of the large scale of the Chagos Archipelago very large marine protected area for protection of taxonomically diverse mobile megafauna. Further, we highlight the value of the VLMPA approach as a strategy towards achieving 30% ocean protection by 2030.

AB - Global calls for greater ocean protection have sparked renewed interest in very large marine protected areas (VLMPAs, >100,000 km2) to achieve management targets; however, their conservation value is debated. We assessed the suitability of a VLMPA (640,000 km2) in the Indian Ocean for capturing the movements of resident mobile marine megafauna. We found that 95% of foraging, breeding and/or locally migrating individuals occurred within the VLMPA despite variable habitat use; adult hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata, n = 22, 6124 tracking days) foraged on mesophotic banks (>30 m depth), reef manta rays (Mobula alfredi, n = 23, 652 tracking days) used shallow submerged banks, and seabirds (red‐footed boobies Sula sula, brown boobies Sula leucogaster, wedge‐tailed shearwaters Ardenna pacifica, n = 257, 1084 tracking days) collectively foraged throughout coastal to pelagic waters. To understand the size of MPA necessary to encompass resident mobile species, we assessed overlap with smaller and larger hypothetical MPAs. An MPA meeting the minimum threshold of a VLMPA (>100,000 km2) would encompass 97% of manta and 94% of turtle locations, and 59% of all seabird locations because of their more pelagic distribution. Synthesis and applications. Our results provide clear evidence for the value of the large scale of the Chagos Archipelago very large marine protected area for protection of taxonomically diverse mobile megafauna. Further, we highlight the value of the VLMPA approach as a strategy towards achieving 30% ocean protection by 2030.

KW - biologging

KW - chagos archipelago

KW - movement ecology

KW - turtles

KW - marine conservation

KW - MPA

KW - manta ray

KW - seabirds

U2 - 10.1111/1365-2664.70117

DO - 10.1111/1365-2664.70117

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Applied Ecology

JF - Journal of Applied Ecology

SN - 0021-8901

ER -