The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required

Sea urchins act as a keystone herbivore in marine coastal ecosystems, regulating macrophyte density, which offers refuge for multiple species. In the Mediterranean Sea, both the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus and fish preying on it are highly valuable target species for artisanal fisheries. As a c...

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Main Authors: Simone Farina, Maura Baroli, Roberto Brundu, Alessandro Conforti, Andrea Cucco, Giovanni De Falco, Ivan Guala, Stefano Guerzoni, Giorgio Massaro, Giovanni Quattrocchi, Giovanni Romagnoni, Walter Brambilla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/10093.pdf
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language English
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author Simone Farina
Maura Baroli
Roberto Brundu
Alessandro Conforti
Andrea Cucco
Giovanni De Falco
Ivan Guala
Stefano Guerzoni
Giorgio Massaro
Giovanni Quattrocchi
Giovanni Romagnoni
Walter Brambilla
spellingShingle Simone Farina
Maura Baroli
Roberto Brundu
Alessandro Conforti
Andrea Cucco
Giovanni De Falco
Ivan Guala
Stefano Guerzoni
Giorgio Massaro
Giovanni Quattrocchi
Giovanni Romagnoni
Walter Brambilla
The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
PeerJ
Sea urchins
Paracentrotus lividus
Population dynamic
Local fisheries management
Sustainable harvesting
Spatial management
author_facet Simone Farina
Maura Baroli
Roberto Brundu
Alessandro Conforti
Andrea Cucco
Giovanni De Falco
Ivan Guala
Stefano Guerzoni
Giorgio Massaro
Giovanni Quattrocchi
Giovanni Romagnoni
Walter Brambilla
author_sort Simone Farina
title The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
title_short The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
title_full The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
title_fullStr The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
title_full_unstemmed The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
title_sort challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are required
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Sea urchins act as a keystone herbivore in marine coastal ecosystems, regulating macrophyte density, which offers refuge for multiple species. In the Mediterranean Sea, both the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus and fish preying on it are highly valuable target species for artisanal fisheries. As a consequence of the interactions between fish, sea urchins and macrophyte, fishing leads to trophic disorders with detrimental consequences for biodiversity and fisheries. In Sardinia (Western Mediterranean Sea), regulations for sea urchin harvesting have been in place since the mid 90s. However, given the important ecological role of P. lividus, the single-species fishery management may fail to take into account important ecosystem interactions. Hence, a deeper understanding of population dynamics, their dependance on environmental constraints and multispecies interactions may help to achieve long-term sustainable use of this resource. This work aims to highlight how sea urchin population structure varies spatially in relation to local environmental constraints and species interactions, with implications for their management. The study area (Sinis Peninsula, West Sardinia, Italy) that includes a Marine Reserve was divided into five sectors. These display combinations of the environmental constraints influencing sea urchin population dynamics, namely type of habitat (calcareous rock, granite, basalt, patchy and continuous meadows of Posidonia oceanica), average bottom current speed and predatory fish abundance. Size-frequency distribution of sea urchins under commercial size (<5 cm diameter size) assessed during the period from 2004 to 2007, before the population collapse in 2010, were compared for sectors and types of habitat. Specific correlations between recruits (0–1 cm diameter size) and bottom current speeds and between middle-sized sea urchins (2–5 cm diameter size) and predatory fish abundance were assessed. Parameters representing habitat spatial configuration (patch density, perimeter-to-area ratio, mean patch size, largest patch index, interspersion/juxtaposition index) were calculated and their influence on sea urchin density assessed. The density of sea urchins under commercial size was significantly higher in calcareous rock and was positively and significantly influenced by the density and average size of the rocky habitat patches. Recruits were significantly abundant in rocky habitats, while they were almost absent in P. oceanica meadows. The density of middle-sized sea urchins was more abundant in calcareous rock than in basalt, granite or P. oceanica. High densities of recruits resulted significantly correlated to low values of average bottom current speed, while a negative trend between the abundance of middle-sized sea urchins and predatory fish was found. Our results point out the need to account for the environmental constraints influencing local sea urchin density in fisheries management.
topic Sea urchins
Paracentrotus lividus
Population dynamic
Local fisheries management
Sustainable harvesting
Spatial management
url https://peerj.com/articles/10093.pdf
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spelling doaj-b917c1f52a6d44689b414fbf0814bba72020-11-25T03:53:53ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-10-018e1009310.7717/peerj.10093The challenge of managing the commercial harvesting of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus: advanced approaches are requiredSimone Farina0Maura Baroli1Roberto Brundu2Alessandro Conforti3Andrea Cucco4Giovanni De Falco5Ivan Guala6Stefano Guerzoni7Giorgio Massaro8Giovanni Quattrocchi9Giovanni Romagnoni10Walter Brambilla11IMC-International Marine Centre, Oristano, ItalyIMC-International Marine Centre, Oristano, ItalyMarine Protected Area “Penisola del Sinis-Isola di Mal di Ventre”, Cabras, Oristano, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalyIMC-International Marine Centre, Oristano, ItalyIMC-International Marine Centre, Oristano, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalyCOISPA Tecnologia & Ricerca, Bari, ItalyCNR—IAS, National Research Council, Institute for the study of Anthropic impacts and Sustainability in the marine environment, Oristano, ItalySea urchins act as a keystone herbivore in marine coastal ecosystems, regulating macrophyte density, which offers refuge for multiple species. In the Mediterranean Sea, both the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus and fish preying on it are highly valuable target species for artisanal fisheries. As a consequence of the interactions between fish, sea urchins and macrophyte, fishing leads to trophic disorders with detrimental consequences for biodiversity and fisheries. In Sardinia (Western Mediterranean Sea), regulations for sea urchin harvesting have been in place since the mid 90s. However, given the important ecological role of P. lividus, the single-species fishery management may fail to take into account important ecosystem interactions. Hence, a deeper understanding of population dynamics, their dependance on environmental constraints and multispecies interactions may help to achieve long-term sustainable use of this resource. This work aims to highlight how sea urchin population structure varies spatially in relation to local environmental constraints and species interactions, with implications for their management. The study area (Sinis Peninsula, West Sardinia, Italy) that includes a Marine Reserve was divided into five sectors. These display combinations of the environmental constraints influencing sea urchin population dynamics, namely type of habitat (calcareous rock, granite, basalt, patchy and continuous meadows of Posidonia oceanica), average bottom current speed and predatory fish abundance. Size-frequency distribution of sea urchins under commercial size (<5 cm diameter size) assessed during the period from 2004 to 2007, before the population collapse in 2010, were compared for sectors and types of habitat. Specific correlations between recruits (0–1 cm diameter size) and bottom current speeds and between middle-sized sea urchins (2–5 cm diameter size) and predatory fish abundance were assessed. Parameters representing habitat spatial configuration (patch density, perimeter-to-area ratio, mean patch size, largest patch index, interspersion/juxtaposition index) were calculated and their influence on sea urchin density assessed. The density of sea urchins under commercial size was significantly higher in calcareous rock and was positively and significantly influenced by the density and average size of the rocky habitat patches. Recruits were significantly abundant in rocky habitats, while they were almost absent in P. oceanica meadows. The density of middle-sized sea urchins was more abundant in calcareous rock than in basalt, granite or P. oceanica. High densities of recruits resulted significantly correlated to low values of average bottom current speed, while a negative trend between the abundance of middle-sized sea urchins and predatory fish was found. Our results point out the need to account for the environmental constraints influencing local sea urchin density in fisheries management.https://peerj.com/articles/10093.pdfSea urchinsParacentrotus lividusPopulation dynamicLocal fisheries managementSustainable harvestingSpatial management