Cumulative human impacts on global marine fauna highlight risk to
fragile functional diversity of marine ecosystems
Abstract
Healthy marine ecosystems provide critical benefits to people worldwide,
but increasing threats from climate change and human activities disrupt
ecosystem functionality and put these benefits at risk. Local and
regional assessments have shown these impacts can be substantial, but we
lack a global assessment of risk to marine biodiversity. Here we
assessed risk of impact by intersecting spatial distributions of 21,267
marine animal species with distributions of 13 anthropogenic stressors
according to each species’ vulnerability, examining results through
multiple lenses that connect to different conservation objectives:
species, taxon, and functional vulnerability. Using this species-focused
approach, we found that vulnerable functional entities in coastal
ecosystems across all marine ecological provinces are at greater risk of
impact than indicated by assessments of broader ecosystem-level impact
risk based on vulnerability of representative habitats, driven largely
by climate stressors. Where multiple lenses of impact assessment
indicate elevated risk, broad area-based protections may be warranted,
but where impacts are focused on vulnerable functional entities there
may be opportunities for more narrowly targeted conservation strategies
such as local habitat restoration, assisted migration, or fishing gear
restrictions. These results provide key insights at local to global
scales on where and how to best meet conservation of species diversity
and ecosystem function.