Authors
Jean-Baptiste Jouffray, Lisa M Wedding, Albert V Norström, Mary K Donovan, Gareth J Williams, Larry B Crowder, Ashley L Erickson, Alan M Friedlander, Nicholas AJ Graham, Jamison M Gove, Carrie V Kappel, John N Kittinger, Joey Lecky, Kirsten LL Oleson, Kimberly A Selkoe, Crow White, Ivor D Williams, Magnus Nyström
Publication date
2019/2/13
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B
Volume
286
Issue
1896
Pages
20182544
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Coral reefs worldwide face unprecedented cumulative anthropogenic effects of interacting local human pressures, global climate change and distal social processes. Reefs are also bound by the natural biophysical environment within which they exist. In this context, a key challenge for effective management is understanding how anthropogenic and biophysical conditions interact to drive distinct coral reef configurations. Here, we use machine learning to conduct explanatory predictions on reef ecosystems defined by both fish and benthic communities. Drawing on the most spatially extensive dataset available across the Hawaiian archipelago—20 anthropogenic and biophysical predictors over 620 survey sites—we model the occurrence of four distinct reef regimes and provide a novel approach to quantify the relative influence of human and environmental variables in shaping reef ecosystems. Our findings …
Total citations
20192020202120222023202461019152414
Scholar articles
JB Jouffray, LM Wedding, AV Norström, MK Donovan… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2019