Los Roques和Las Aves群岛,委内瑞拉:两个鲜为人知的东南加勒比海群岛的海洋生态和保护侦察

Q3 Earth and Planetary Sciences
A. Debrot, Anaurora Yranzo, D. Arocha
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引用次数: 4

摘要

委内瑞拉的Los Roques和Las Aves海洋珊瑚礁群岛位于加勒比生物地理上独特和生物多样性的地区,拥有广泛的珊瑚礁、海草床、红树林和浅层大型藻类草甸。这些群岛的地理位置使它们免受大多数西大西洋飓风的破坏以及最严重的加勒比珊瑚白化事件的影响。虽然阿维斯群岛仍然无人居住,并且是一个交通不便的地区,但洛斯罗克斯自1972年以来一直是一个管理的国家公园。我们在此提出了对这些群岛最近研究的最新综合,以帮助对这些岛群感兴趣的科学家和保护主义者,因为这些岛群没有最近的生态评论。洛斯罗克斯比拉斯阿夫斯有更好的记录,是委内瑞拉最大的珊瑚礁海洋保护区。岛上约有1500名居民,主要以旅游业和渔业为生。研究表明,洛斯罗克拥有的鱼类种群遭受的捕捞压力相对较小,可能成为加勒比地区其他地方原始鱼类群落的罕见基准。在过去的五十年里,尽管海洋公园的资金和人员严重短缺,但它仍然成功地保持了对海鸟栖息地的重要性。考虑到该群岛的零碎信息,为Las Aves建立一个新的基线生物清单尤为重要。Los Roques和Las Aves的相对完整和有弹性的海洋珊瑚礁系统具有重要的区域保护价值,应该得到比目前更多的保护和生物多样性关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Los Roques and Las Aves Archipelagos, Venezuela: A Marine Ecological and Conservation Reconnaissance of Two Little-Known Southeastern Caribbean Oceanic Archipelagos
The Los Roques and Las Aves oceanic coral reef archipelagos of Venezuela lie in a biogeographically unique and biologically diverse area of the Caribbean and possess extensive coral reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves and shallow macroalgae meadows. The geographic location of these archipelagos safeguards them from most Western Atlantic hurricane damage as well as the most severe Caribbean coral bleaching episodes. While the Aves islands remain uninhabited and are an area of low accessibility, Los Roques has been a managed national park since 1972. We here present an updated synthesis of recent research for these archipelagos as an aid to scientists and conservationists interested in these island groups for which no recent ecological reviews are available. Los Roques has been much better documented than Las Aves and is the largest coral reef marine protected area of Venezuela. It has about 1,500 inhabitants living principally from tourism and fisheries. Studies show that Los Roques possesses fish populations that suffer comparatively less fishing pressure and may serve as a rare benchmark for pristine fish communities elsewhere in the Caribbean. It has also successfully maintained its importance to seabird colonies for the last five decades, notwithstanding serious marine park funding and staffing shortages. A new baseline biological inventory for Las Aves is particulary critical considering the fragmentary information available for this archipelago. The relatively intact and resilient oceanic coral reef systems of Los Roques and Las Aves are of regionally significant conservation value and deserve much more conservation and biodiversity attention than so far accorded.
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来源期刊
Atoll Research Bulletin
Atoll Research Bulletin Earth and Planetary Sciences-Oceanography
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