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Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs

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Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs. / Maire, Eva; Robinson, James P W; McLean, Matthew et al.
In: Current biology : CB, Vol. 34, No. 20, 21.10.2024, p. 4612-4622.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Maire, E, Robinson, JPW, McLean, M, Arif, S, Zamborain-Mason, J, Cinner, JE, Ferse, SCA, Graham, NAJ, Hoey, AS, MacNeil, MA, Mouillot, D & Hicks, CC 2024, 'Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs', Current biology : CB, vol. 34, no. 20, pp. 4612-4622. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031

APA

Maire, E., Robinson, J. P. W., McLean, M., Arif, S., Zamborain-Mason, J., Cinner, J. E., Ferse, S. C. A., Graham, N. A. J., Hoey, A. S., MacNeil, M. A., Mouillot, D., & Hicks, C. C. (2024). Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs. Current biology : CB, 34(20), 4612-4622. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031

Vancouver

Maire E, Robinson JPW, McLean M, Arif S, Zamborain-Mason J, Cinner JE et al. Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs. Current biology : CB. 2024 Oct 21;34(20):4612-4622. Epub 2024 Sept 17. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031

Author

Maire, Eva ; Robinson, James P W ; McLean, Matthew et al. / Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs. In: Current biology : CB. 2024 ; Vol. 34, No. 20. pp. 4612-4622.

Bibtex

@article{2712ee261d60454696821b92db06ef05,
title = "Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs",
abstract = "Coral reefs support an incredible abundance and diversity of fish species, with reef-associated fisheries providing important sources of income, food, and dietary micronutrients to millions of people across the tropics. However, the rapid degradation of the world's coral reefs and the decline in their biodiversity may limit their capacity to supply nutritious and affordable seafood while meeting conservation goals for sustainability. Here, we conduct a global-scale analysis of how the nutritional quality of reef fish assemblages (nutritional contribution to the recommended daily intake of calcium, iron, and zinc contained in an average 100 g fish on the reef) relates to key environmental, socioeconomic, and ecological conditions, including two key metrics of fish biodiversity. Our global analysis of more than 1,600 tropical reefs reveals that fish trophic composition is a more important driver of micronutrient concentrations than socioeconomic and environmental conditions. Specifically, micronutrient density increases as the relative biomass of herbivores and detritivores increases at lower overall biomass or under high human pressure. This suggests that the provision of essential micronutrients can be maintained or even increase where fish biomass decreases, reinforcing the need for policies that ensure sustainable fishing, and that these micronutrients are retained locally for nutrition. Furthermore, we found a negative association between micronutrient density and two metrics of fish biodiversity, revealing an important nutrition-biodiversity trade-off. Protecting reefs with high levels of biodiversity maintains key ecosystem functions, whereas sustainable fisheries management in locations with high micronutrient density could sustain the essential supply of micronutrients to coastal human communities.",
keywords = "food and nutrition security, micronutrients, reef fish communities, reef fisheries, management",
author = "Eva Maire and Robinson, {James P W} and Matthew McLean and Suchinta Arif and Jessica Zamborain-Mason and Cinner, {Joshua E} and Ferse, {Sebastian C A} and Graham, {Nicholas A J} and Hoey, {Andrew S} and MacNeil, {M Aaron} and David Mouillot and Hicks, {Christina C}",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "4612--4622",
journal = "Current biology : CB",
issn = "0960-9822",
publisher = "CELL PRESS",
number = "20",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Managing nutrition-biodiversity trade-offs on coral reefs

AU - Maire, Eva

AU - Robinson, James P W

AU - McLean, Matthew

AU - Arif, Suchinta

AU - Zamborain-Mason, Jessica

AU - Cinner, Joshua E

AU - Ferse, Sebastian C A

AU - Graham, Nicholas A J

AU - Hoey, Andrew S

AU - MacNeil, M Aaron

AU - Mouillot, David

AU - Hicks, Christina C

PY - 2024/10/21

Y1 - 2024/10/21

N2 - Coral reefs support an incredible abundance and diversity of fish species, with reef-associated fisheries providing important sources of income, food, and dietary micronutrients to millions of people across the tropics. However, the rapid degradation of the world's coral reefs and the decline in their biodiversity may limit their capacity to supply nutritious and affordable seafood while meeting conservation goals for sustainability. Here, we conduct a global-scale analysis of how the nutritional quality of reef fish assemblages (nutritional contribution to the recommended daily intake of calcium, iron, and zinc contained in an average 100 g fish on the reef) relates to key environmental, socioeconomic, and ecological conditions, including two key metrics of fish biodiversity. Our global analysis of more than 1,600 tropical reefs reveals that fish trophic composition is a more important driver of micronutrient concentrations than socioeconomic and environmental conditions. Specifically, micronutrient density increases as the relative biomass of herbivores and detritivores increases at lower overall biomass or under high human pressure. This suggests that the provision of essential micronutrients can be maintained or even increase where fish biomass decreases, reinforcing the need for policies that ensure sustainable fishing, and that these micronutrients are retained locally for nutrition. Furthermore, we found a negative association between micronutrient density and two metrics of fish biodiversity, revealing an important nutrition-biodiversity trade-off. Protecting reefs with high levels of biodiversity maintains key ecosystem functions, whereas sustainable fisheries management in locations with high micronutrient density could sustain the essential supply of micronutrients to coastal human communities.

AB - Coral reefs support an incredible abundance and diversity of fish species, with reef-associated fisheries providing important sources of income, food, and dietary micronutrients to millions of people across the tropics. However, the rapid degradation of the world's coral reefs and the decline in their biodiversity may limit their capacity to supply nutritious and affordable seafood while meeting conservation goals for sustainability. Here, we conduct a global-scale analysis of how the nutritional quality of reef fish assemblages (nutritional contribution to the recommended daily intake of calcium, iron, and zinc contained in an average 100 g fish on the reef) relates to key environmental, socioeconomic, and ecological conditions, including two key metrics of fish biodiversity. Our global analysis of more than 1,600 tropical reefs reveals that fish trophic composition is a more important driver of micronutrient concentrations than socioeconomic and environmental conditions. Specifically, micronutrient density increases as the relative biomass of herbivores and detritivores increases at lower overall biomass or under high human pressure. This suggests that the provision of essential micronutrients can be maintained or even increase where fish biomass decreases, reinforcing the need for policies that ensure sustainable fishing, and that these micronutrients are retained locally for nutrition. Furthermore, we found a negative association between micronutrient density and two metrics of fish biodiversity, revealing an important nutrition-biodiversity trade-off. Protecting reefs with high levels of biodiversity maintains key ecosystem functions, whereas sustainable fisheries management in locations with high micronutrient density could sustain the essential supply of micronutrients to coastal human communities.

KW - food and nutrition security

KW - micronutrients

KW - reef fish communities

KW - reef fisheries

KW - management

U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031

DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.031

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 39293442

VL - 34

SP - 4612

EP - 4622

JO - Current biology : CB

JF - Current biology : CB

SN - 0960-9822

IS - 20

ER -