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Dive into the research topics where Carrie V. Kappel is active.

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Featured researches published by Carrie V. Kappel.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Trophic cascade facilitates coral recruitment in a marine reserve

Peter J. Mumby; Alastair R. Harborne; Jodene Williams; Carrie V. Kappel; Daniel R. Brumbaugh; Fiorenza Micheli; Katherine E. Holmes; Craig P. Dahlgren; Claire B. Paris; Paul G. Blackwell

Reduced fishing pressure and weak predator–prey interactions within marine reserves can create trophic cascades that increase the number of grazing fishes and reduce the coverage of macroalgae on coral reefs. Here, we show that the impacts of reserves extend beyond trophic cascades and enhance the process of coral recruitment. Increased fish grazing, primarily driven by reduced fishing, was strongly negatively correlated with macroalgal cover and resulted in a 2-fold increase in the density of coral recruits within a Bahamian reef system. Our conclusions are robust because four alternative hypotheses that may generate a spurious correlation between grazing and coral recruitment were tested and rejected. Grazing appears to influence the density and community structure of coral recruits, but no detectable influence was found on the overall size-frequency distribution, community structure, or cover of corals. We interpret this absence of pattern in the adult coral community as symptomatic of the impact of a recent disturbance event that masks the recovery trajectories of individual reefs. Marine reserves are not a panacea for conservation but can facilitate the recovery of corals from disturbance and may help sustain the biodiversity of organisms that depend on a complex three-dimensional coral habitat.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2005

Losing pieces of the puzzle: threats to marine, estuarine, and diadromous species

Carrie V. Kappel

The number of marine species at risk of extinction is rising. Understanding the threats that contribute to extinction risk in the seas is thus critical to conservation. When major threats to marine, estuarine, and diadromous species on the US Endangered Species Act and IUCN Red lists were ranked according to the number of species they affect, strong consensus in the ranking of threats across species and between institutions emerged. Overexploitation is the most frequent threat to vulnerable marine species, with approximately half of threatened species caught as bycatch in fisheries. Habitat degradation, the primary threat to terrestrial species, ranks second in impact on marine species. Loss of listed marine species would probably affect ecosystem function and delivery of ecosystem services because many of these species are strong inter-actors, including ecosystem engineers, taxa that provide important nutrient links between terrestrial and marine ecosystems, and a disproportionate number of high trophic-...


Ecological Applications | 2008

TROPICAL COASTAL HABITATS AS SURROGATES OF FISH COMMUNITY STRUCTURE, GRAZING, AND FISHERIES VALUE

Alastair R. Harborne; Peter J. Mumby; Carrie V. Kappel; Craig P. Dahlgren; Fiorenza Micheli; Katherine E. Holmes; Daniel R. Brumbaugh

Habitat maps are frequently invoked as surrogates of biodiversity to aid the design of networks of marine reserves. Maps are used to maximize habitat heterogeneity in reserves because this is likely to maximize the number of species protected. However, the techniques efficacy is limited by intra-habitat variability in the species present and their abundances. Although communities are expected to vary among patches of the same habitat, this variability is poorly documented and rarely incorporated into reserve planning. To examine intra-habitat variability in coral-reef fishes, we generated a data set from eight tropical coastal habitats and six islands in the Bahamian archipelago using underwater visual censuses. Firstly, we provide further support for habitat heterogeneity as a surrogate of biodiversity as each predefined habitat type supported a distinct assemblage of fishes. Intra-habitat variability in fish community structure at scales of hundreds of kilometers (among islands) was significant in at least 75% of the habitats studied, depending on whether presence/absence, density, or biomass data were used. Intra-habitat variability was positively correlated with the mean number of species in that habitat when density and biomass data were used. Such relationships provide a proxy for the assessment of intra-habitat variability when detailed quantitative data are scarce. Intra-habitat variability was examined in more detail for one habitat (forereefs visually dominated by Montastraea corals). Variability in community structure among islands was driven by small, demersal families (e.g., territorial pomacentrid and labrid fishes). Finally, we examined the ecological and economic significance of intra-habitat variability in fish assemblages on Montastraea reefs by identifying how this variability affects the composition and abundances of fishes in different functional groups, the key ecosystem process of parrotfish grazing, and the ecosystem service of value of commercially important finfish. There were significant differences in a range of functional groups and grazing, but not fisheries value. Variability at the scale of tens of kilometers (among reefs around an island) was less than that among islands. Caribbean marine reserves should be replicated at scales of hundreds of kilometers, particularly for species-rich habitats, to capture important intra-habitat variability in community structure, function, and an ecosystem process.


Science | 2006

Fishing, Trophic Cascades, and the Process of Grazing on Coral Reefs

Peter J. Mumby; Craig P. Dahlgren; Alastair R. Harborne; Carrie V. Kappel; Fiorenza Micheli; Daniel R. Brumbaugh; Katherine E. Holmes; Judith M. Mendes; Kenneth Broad; James N. Sanchirico; Kevin Buch; Steve J. Box; Richard W. Stoffle; Andrew B. Gill


Conservation Biology | 2007

Evaluating and ranking the vulnerability of global marine ecosystems to anthropogenic threats

Benjamin S. Halpern; Kimberly A. Selkoe; Fiorenza Micheli; Carrie V. Kappel


Science | 2005

Are U.S. coral reefs on the slippery slope to slime

John M. Pandolfi; Jeremy B. C. Jackson; Nancy Baron; Roger Bradbury; Hector M. Guzman; Terence P. Hughes; Carrie V. Kappel; Fiorenza Micheli; John C. Ogden; Hugh P. Possingham; Enric Sala


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2008

Reserve effects and natural variation in coral reef communities

Alastair R. Harborne; Peter J. Mumby; Carrie V. Kappel; Craig P. Dahlgren; Fiorenza Micheli; Katherine E. Holmes; James N. Sanchirico; Kenneth Broad; Ian A. Elliott; Daniel R. Brumbaugh


Biological Conservation | 2008

Persistence of depleted abalones in marine reserves of central California

Fiorenza Micheli; Andrew O. Shelton; Seth M. Bushinsky; Alice L. Chiu; Alison J. Haupt; Kimberly W. Heiman; Carrie V. Kappel; Margaret C. Lynch; Rebecca G. Martone; Robert B. Dunbar; James Watanabe


Archive | 2012

Mapping Cumulative Impacts of Human Activities on Marine Ecosystems

Carrie V. Kappel; Benjamin S. Halpern; Nicholas Napoli


Science | 2005

Ecology. Are U.S. coral reefs on the slippery slope to slime

John M. Pandolfi; Jeremy B. C. Jackson; Nancy Baron; Roger Bradbury; Hector M. Guzman; Terry P. Hughes; Carrie V. Kappel; Fiorenza Micheli; John C. Ogden; Hugh P. Possingham; Enric Sala

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Craig P. Dahlgren

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Daniel R. Brumbaugh

American Museum of Natural History

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Katherine E. Holmes

American Museum of Natural History

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Peter J. Mumby

University of Queensland

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Hector M. Guzman

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

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John F. Bruno

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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