Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment

The present paper seeks to provide a scientific basis for the establishment of marine protected areas (MPA) through an integrated and objective analysis of biodiversity survey data, which permits ranking of various sites in order of their importance as potential MPA. The approach proposed here invol...

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Main Authors: Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y., Medina, Marianne Lorelei S., Luzon, Katrina S., Samson, Maricar S., Nañola, Cleto L., Rollon, Rene N., Roleda, Michael Y.
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Published: Animo Repository 2011
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/551
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-15502022-05-13T06:02:07Z Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y. Medina, Marianne Lorelei S. Luzon, Katrina S. Samson, Maricar S. Nañola, Cleto L. Rollon, Rene N. Roleda, Michael Y. The present paper seeks to provide a scientific basis for the establishment of marine protected areas (MPA) through an integrated and objective analysis of biodiversity survey data, which permits ranking of various sites in order of their importance as potential MPA. The approach proposed here involves the determination of biodiversity values for each of the four taxonomic groups (corals, reef fishes, seagrasses and seaweeds) and an assessment of the levels of risk for each of the survey sites to human degradation and natural disturbance. The biodiversity and risk scores were then combined into one MPA priority score using a conversion table. Five of the 17 geographic units (mostly small islands) stand out as high priority sites for conservation: Biri in Northern Samar; Ticao and Palaguigue Islands in Masbate; Pujada Bay, Davao Oriental; Homonhon and Suluan Islands, Eastern Samar; and Laoang, Northern Samar. The approach described here provides a framework by which an objective, repeatable prioritization of conservation value of various areas could be undertaken. Although the final measures are not absolute, it allows one to make explicit the assumptions made about the characters and measures used in prioritization and assign relative weights to various species, taxonomic groups and data sets, thereby reducing the impact of an observer's subjectivity. 2011-12-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/551 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Marine parks and reserves--Philippines Reefs--Philippines--Pacific Coast Marine Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Marine parks and reserves--Philippines
Reefs--Philippines--Pacific Coast
Marine Biology
spellingShingle Marine parks and reserves--Philippines
Reefs--Philippines--Pacific Coast
Marine Biology
Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
Medina, Marianne Lorelei S.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Samson, Maricar S.
Nañola, Cleto L.
Rollon, Rene N.
Roleda, Michael Y.
Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
description The present paper seeks to provide a scientific basis for the establishment of marine protected areas (MPA) through an integrated and objective analysis of biodiversity survey data, which permits ranking of various sites in order of their importance as potential MPA. The approach proposed here involves the determination of biodiversity values for each of the four taxonomic groups (corals, reef fishes, seagrasses and seaweeds) and an assessment of the levels of risk for each of the survey sites to human degradation and natural disturbance. The biodiversity and risk scores were then combined into one MPA priority score using a conversion table. Five of the 17 geographic units (mostly small islands) stand out as high priority sites for conservation: Biri in Northern Samar; Ticao and Palaguigue Islands in Masbate; Pujada Bay, Davao Oriental; Homonhon and Suluan Islands, Eastern Samar; and Laoang, Northern Samar. The approach described here provides a framework by which an objective, repeatable prioritization of conservation value of various areas could be undertaken. Although the final measures are not absolute, it allows one to make explicit the assumptions made about the characters and measures used in prioritization and assign relative weights to various species, taxonomic groups and data sets, thereby reducing the impact of an observer's subjectivity.
format text
author Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
Medina, Marianne Lorelei S.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Samson, Maricar S.
Nañola, Cleto L.
Rollon, Rene N.
Roleda, Michael Y.
author_facet Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
Medina, Marianne Lorelei S.
Luzon, Katrina S.
Samson, Maricar S.
Nañola, Cleto L.
Rollon, Rene N.
Roleda, Michael Y.
author_sort Licuanan, Wilfredo Roehl Y.
title Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
title_short Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
title_full Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
title_fullStr Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
title_full_unstemmed Priority reef areas in the Pacific Coast of the Philippines for marine protected area deployment
title_sort priority reef areas in the pacific coast of the philippines for marine protected area deployment
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2011
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/551
_version_ 1733052836222074880