Marine protected areas #MPAs are increasingly promoted as #ocean-based #solution to #ClimateChange, but their contribution to climate change #adaptation and #mitigation remains contentious. Our meta-analysis of 22,403 papers brings clarity. Link below.
We identified the potential “climate pathways” through which #MPAs could contribute to #ClimateChange#mitigation and #adaptation. First along mitigation and adaptation dimensions, and then distinguishing among #ecological and #social dimensions of adaptation.
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We then carried out a systematic literature #review and summarized the results of all empirical studies documenting #MPA outcomes on these climate pathways using both vote-counting and a #MetaAnalytical approach.
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The systematic literature review on #MPA effects on #climate pathways generated a total of 22,403 publications of which 378 were included in vote counting, providing insights from 241 different #MPAs.
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Publications were unevenly distributed among continents, with most #ecological adaptation pathways studied in #Europe and most mitigation and #social adaptation pathways studied in #Asia.
Significant increases in C sequestration were found in preserved or restored #seagrass and #mangrove in comparison to similar areas undergoing human pressures. Similarly, untrawled #sediments sequestered significantly more C than areas exposed to trawling.
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Major knowledge gaps remain on how conservation affects #macroalgae living biomass and thus their contribution to C sequestration.
Further research is needed to quantify the exportation rates of organic C from #fish biomass towards #sediments.
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#MPAs contribute to #ecological#adaptation by increasing biodiversity levels, reproductive output and coastal protection compared to unprotected sites.
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#MPAs had a majority of positive outcomes across all #social#adaptive pathways (except social organization):
Across all 4 pathways, only #full and #high levels of protection resulted in #mitigation or #adaptation benefits. In contrast, low levels of protection generated no benefits.
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↗️ in species richness and in fishers’ income only occurred for #FullyProtectedAreas, where no fishing is allowed.
Clear signal that #ProtectionLevel should take precedence in #MPA design in stark contrast to current paradigm of ocean protection globally, with proportion of fully and highly protected MPAs plummeting as countries have rushed to meet conservation commitments.
Our synthesis provides empirical evidence that #MPAs contribute to #ClimateChange#mitigation and #adaptation, particularly when #fully protected, making them a key tool for achieving the goals of the UN Sustainable Development Agenda and the Paris Climate Agreement.
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This work is the first chapter of @JJacquemont's PhD, in collaboration with the @ocean_climate platform, and published in @OneEarth_CP. Watch-out for more papers to come on #MPAs.
(1/4) The #ocean is central to human well-being but an expanding human footprint is placing it at risk. 6% of the #Mediterranean Sea is covered by a #MarineProtectedArea (#MPA) but this percentage is far from telling the whole story...
(2/4) Evaluating the #protection levels of the 1062 Mediterranean #MPAs we show that 95% of this area do not impose #regulations stronger inside than outside #MPAs.
(3/4) Only 0.23% of the #Mediterranean Sea is #fully or #highly protected; levels of protection known to deliver the ecological benefits from which socioeconomic benefits are derived.