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Dive into the research topics where Courtney Scarborough is active.

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Featured researches published by Courtney Scarborough.


Nature | 2012

An index to assess the health and benefits of the global ocean

Benjamin S. Halpern; Catherine Longo; Darren Hardy; Karen L. McLeod; Jameal F. Samhouri; Steven K. Katona; Kristin M. Kleisner; Sarah E. Lester; Jennifer K. O’Leary; Marla Ranelletti; Andrew A. Rosenberg; Courtney Scarborough; Elizabeth R. Selig; Benjamin D. Best; Daniel R. Brumbaugh; F. Stuart Chapin; Larry B. Crowder; Kendra L. Daly; Scott C. Doney; Cristiane T. Elfes; Michael J. Fogarty; Steven D. Gaines; Kelsey I. Jacobsen; Leah Bunce Karrer; Heather M. Leslie; Elizabeth Neeley; Daniel Pauly; Stephen Polasky; Bud Ris; Kevin St. Martin

The ocean plays a critical role in supporting human well-being, from providing food, livelihoods and recreational opportunities to regulating the global climate. Sustainable management aimed at maintaining the flow of a broad range of benefits from the ocean requires a comprehensive and quantitative method to measure and monitor the health of coupled human–ocean systems. We created an index comprising ten diverse public goals for a healthy coupled human–ocean system and calculated the index for every coastal country. Globally, the overall index score was 60 out of 100 (range 36–86), with developed countries generally performing better than developing countries, but with notable exceptions. Only 5% of countries scored higher than 70, whereas 32% scored lower than 50. The index provides a powerful tool to raise public awareness, direct resource management, improve policy and prioritize scientific research.


Ecosystem Health and Sustainability | 2015

Principles for managing marine ecosystems prone to tipping points

Kimberly A. Selkoe; Thorsten Blenckner; Margaret R. Caldwell; Larry B. Crowder; Ashley L. Erickson; Timothy E. Essington; James A. Estes; Rod Fujita; Benjamin S. Halpern; Mary E. Hunsicker; Carrie V. Kappel; Ryan P. Kelly; John N. Kittinger; Phillip S. Levin; John Lynham; Megan E. Mach; Rebecca G. Martone; Lindley A. Mease; Anne K. Salomon; Jameal F. Samhouri; Courtney Scarborough; Adrian C. Stier; Crow White; Joy B. Zedler

Abstract As climatic changes and human uses intensify, resource managers and other decision makers are taking actions to either avoid or respond to ecosystem tipping points, or dramatic shifts in structure and function that are often costly and hard to reverse. Evidence indicates that explicitly addressing tipping points leads to improved management outcomes. Drawing on theory and examples from marine systems, we distill a set of seven principles to guide effective management in ecosystems with tipping points, derived from the best available science. These principles are based on observations that tipping points (1) are possible everywhere, (2) are associated with intense and/or multifaceted human use, (3) may be preceded by changes in early‐warning indicators, (4) may redistribute benefits among stakeholders, (5) affect the relative costs of action and inaction, (6) suggest biologically informed management targets, and (7) often require an adaptive response to monitoring. We suggest that early action to preserve system resilience is likely more practical, affordable, and effective than late action to halt or reverse a tipping point. We articulate a conceptual approach to management focused on linking management targets to thresholds, tracking early‐warning signals of ecosystem instability, and stepping up investment in monitoring and mitigation as the likelihood of dramatic ecosystem change increases. This approach can simplify and economize management by allowing decision makers to capitalize on the increasing value of precise information about threshold relationships when a system is closer to tipping or by ensuring that restoration effort is sufficient to tip a system into the desired regime.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Patterns and Emerging Trends in Global Ocean Health

Benjamin S. Halpern; Catherine Longo; Julia S. Stewart Lowndes; Benjamin D. Best; Melanie Frazier; Steven K. Katona; Kristin M. Kleisner; Andrew A. Rosenberg; Courtney Scarborough; Elizabeth R. Selig

International and regional policies aimed at managing ocean ecosystem health need quantitative and comprehensive indices to synthesize information from a variety of sources, consistently measure progress, and communicate with key constituencies and the public. Here we present the second annual global assessment of the Ocean Health Index, reporting current scores and annual changes since 2012, recalculated using updated methods and data based on the best available science, for 221 coastal countries and territories. The Index measures performance of ten societal goals for healthy oceans on a quantitative scale of increasing health from 0 to 100, and combines these scores into a single Index score, for each country and globally. The global Index score improved one point (from 67 to 68), while many country-level Index and goal scores had larger changes. Per-country Index scores ranged from 41–95 and, on average, improved by 0.06 points (range -8 to +12). Globally, average scores increased for individual goals by as much as 6.5 points (coastal economies) and decreased by as much as 1.2 points (natural products). Annual updates of the Index, even when not all input data have been updated, provide valuable information to scientists, policy makers, and resource managers because patterns and trends can emerge from the data that have been updated. Changes of even a few points indicate potential successes (when scores increase) that merit recognition, or concerns (when scores decrease) that may require mitigative action, with changes of more than 10–20 points representing large shifts that deserve greater attention. Goal scores showed remarkably little covariance across regions, indicating low redundancy in the Index, such that each goal delivers information about a different facet of ocean health. Together these scores provide a snapshot of global ocean health and suggest where countries have made progress and where a need for further improvement exists.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Regional-Scale Ocean Health Index for Brazil

Cristiane T. Elfes; Catherine Longo; Benjamin S. Halpern; Darren Hardy; Courtney Scarborough; Benjamin D. Best; Tiago Pinheiro; Guilherme Fraga Dutra

Brazil has one of the largest and fastest growing economies and one of the largest coastlines in the world, making human use and enjoyment of coastal and marine resources of fundamental importance to the country. Integrated assessments of ocean health are needed to understand the condition of a range of benefits that humans derive from marine systems and to evaluate where attention should be focused to improve the health of these systems. Here we describe the first such assessment for Brazil at both national and state levels. We applied the Ocean Health Index framework, which evaluates ten public goals for healthy oceans. Despite refinements of input data and model formulations, the national score of 60 (out of 100) was highly congruent with the previous global assessment for Brazil of 62. Variability in scores among coastal states was most striking for goals related to mariculture, protected areas, tourism, and clean waters. Extractive goals, including Food Provision, received low scores relative to habitat-related goals, such as Biodiversity. This study demonstrates the applicability of the Ocean Health Index at a regional scale, and its usefulness in highlighting existing data and knowledge gaps and identifying key policy and management recommendations. To improve Brazils ocean health, this study suggests that future actions should focus on: enhancing fisheries management, expanding marine protected areas, and monitoring coastal habitats.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Assessing the Health of the U.S. West Coast with a Regional-Scale Application of the Ocean Health Index

Benjamin S. Halpern; Catherine Longo; Courtney Scarborough; Darren Hardy; Benjamin D. Best; Scott C. Doney; Steven K. Katona; Karen L. McLeod; Andrew A. Rosenberg; Jameal F. Samhouri

Management of marine ecosystems increasingly demands comprehensive and quantitative assessments of ocean health, but lacks a tool to do so. We applied the recently developed Ocean Health Index to assess ocean health in the relatively data-rich US west coast region. The overall region scored 71 out of 100, with sub-regions scoring from 65 (Washington) to 74 (Oregon). Highest scoring goals included tourism and recreation (99) and clean waters (87), while the lowest scoring goals were sense of place (48) and artisanal fishing opportunities (57). Surprisingly, even in this well-studied area data limitations precluded robust assessments of past trends in overall ocean health. Nonetheless, retrospective calculation of current status showed that many goals have declined, by up to 20%. In contrast, near-term future scores were on average 6% greater than current status across all goals and sub-regions. Application of hypothetical but realistic management scenarios illustrate how the Index can be used to predict and understand the tradeoffs among goals and consequences for overall ocean health. We illustrate and discuss how this index can be used to vet underlying assumptions and decisions with local stakeholders and decision-makers so that scores reflect regional knowledge, priorities and values. We also highlight the importance of ongoing and future monitoring that will provide robust data relevant to ocean health assessment.


Ecological Applications | 2016

Characterizing driver–response relationships in marine pelagic ecosystems for improved ocean management

Mary E. Hunsicker; Carrie V. Kappel; Kimberly A. Selkoe; Benjamin S. Halpern; Courtney Scarborough; Lindley A. Mease; Alisan Amrhein

Scientists and resource managers often use methods and tools that assume ecosystem components respond linearly to environmental drivers and human stressors. However, a growing body of literature demonstrates that many relationships are-non-linear, where small changes in a driver prompt a disproportionately large ecological response. We aim to provide a comprehensive assessment of the relationships between drivers and ecosystem components to identify where and when non-linearities are likely to occur. We focused our analyses on one of the best-studied marine systems, pelagic ecosystems, which allowed us to apply robust statistical techniques on a large pool of previously published studies. In this synthesis, we (1) conduct a wide literature review on single driver-response relationships in pelagic systems, (2) use statistical models to identify the degree of non-linearity in these relationships, and (3) assess whether general patterns exist in the strengths and shapes of non-linear relationships across drivers. Overall we found that non-linearities are common in pelagic ecosystems, comprising at least 52% of all driver-response relation- ships. This is likely an underestimate, as papers with higher quality data and analytical approaches reported non-linear relationships at a higher frequency (on average 11% more). Consequently, in the absence of evidence for a linear relationship, it is safer to assume a relationship is non-linear. Strong non-linearities can lead to greater ecological and socioeconomic consequences if they are unknown (and/or unanticipated), but if known they may provide clear thresholds to inform management targets. In pelagic systems, strongly non-linear relationships are often driven by climate and trophodynamic variables but are also associated with local stressors, such as overfishing and pollution, that can be more easily controlled by managers. Even when marine resource managers cannot influence ecosystem change, they can use information about threshold responses to guide how other stressors are managed and to adapt to new ocean conditions. As methods to detect and reduce uncertainty around threshold values improve, managers will be able to better understand and account for ubiquitous non-linear relationships.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2017

Our path to better science in less time using open data science tools

Julia S. Stewart Lowndes; Benjamin D. Best; Courtney Scarborough; Jamie C. Afflerbach; Melanie Frazier; Casey O’Hara; Ning Jiang; Benjamin S. Halpern

Reproducibility has long been a tenet of science but has been challenging to achieve—we learned this the hard way when our old approaches proved inadequate to efficiently reproduce our own work. Here we describe how several free software tools have fundamentally upgraded our approach to collaborative research, making our entire workflow more transparent and streamlined. By describing specific tools and how we incrementally began using them for the Ocean Health Index project, we hope to encourage others in the scientific community to do the same—so we can all produce better science in less time.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2015

Using Ecological Thresholds to Inform Resource Management: Current Options and Future Possibilities

Melissa M. Foley; Rebecca G. Martone; Michael D. Fox; Carrie V. Kappel; Lindley A. Mease; Ashley L. Erickson; Benjamin S. Halpern; Kimberly A. Selkoe; Peter Taylor; Courtney Scarborough

In the face of growing human impacts on ecosystems, scientists and managers recognize the need to better understand thresholds and nonlinear dynamics in ecological systems to help set management targets. However, our understanding of the factors that drive threshold dynamics, and when and how rapidly thresholds will be crossed is currently limited in many systems. In spite of these limitations, there are approaches available to practitioners today—including ecosystem monitoring, statistical methods to identify thresholds and indicators, and threshold-based adaptive management—that can be used to help avoid ecological thresholds or restore systems that have crossed them. We briefly review the current state of knowledge and then use real-world examples to demonstrate how resource managers can use available approaches to avoid crossing ecological thresholds. We also highlight new tools and indicators being developed that have the potential to enhance our ability to detect change, predict when a system is approaching an ecological threshold, or restore systems that have already crossed a tipping point.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Assessing Global Marine Biodiversity Status within a Coupled Socio-Ecological Perspective

Elizabeth R. Selig; Catherine Longo; Benjamin S. Halpern; Benjamin D. Best; Darren Hardy; Cristiane T. Elfes; Courtney Scarborough; Kristin M. Kleisner; Steven K. Katona

People value the existence of a variety of marine species and habitats, many of which are negatively impacted by human activities. The Convention on Biological Diversity and other international and national policy agreements have set broad goals for reducing the rate of biodiversity loss. However, efforts to conserve biodiversity cannot be effective without comprehensive metrics both to assess progress towards meeting conservation goals and to account for measures that reduce pressures so that positive actions are encouraged. We developed an index based on a global assessment of the condition of marine biodiversity using publically available data to estimate the condition of species and habitats within 151 coastal countries. Our assessment also included data on social and ecological pressures on biodiversity as well as variables that indicate whether good governance is in place to reduce them. Thus, our index is a social as well as ecological measure of the current and likely future status of biodiversity. As part of our analyses, we set explicit reference points or targets that provide benchmarks for success and allow for comparative assessment of current conditions. Overall country-level scores ranged from 43 to 95 on a scale of 1 to 100, but countries that scored high for species did not necessarily score high for habitats. Although most current status scores were relatively high, likely future status scores for biodiversity were much lower in most countries due to negative trends for both species and habitats. We also found a strong positive relationship between the Human Development Index and resilience measures that could promote greater sustainability by reducing pressures. This relationship suggests that many developing countries lack effective governance, further jeopardizing their ability to maintain species and habitats in the future.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2013

Exploring Patterns of Seafood Provision Revealed in the Global Ocean Health Index

Kristin M. Kleisner; Catherine Longo; Marta Coll; Ben S. Halpern; Darren Hardy; Steven K. Katona; Frédéric Le Manach; Daniel Pauly; Andrew A. Rosenberg; Jameal F. Samhouri; Courtney Scarborough; U. Rashid Sumaila; Reg Watson; Dirk Zeller

Sustainable provision of seafood from wild-capture fisheries and mariculture is a fundamental component of healthy marine ecosystems and a major component of the Ocean Health Index. Here we critically review the food provision model of the Ocean Health Index, and explore the implications of knowledge gaps, scale of analysis, choice of reference points, measures of sustainability, and quality of input data. Global patterns for fisheries are positively related to human development and latitude, whereas patterns for mariculture are most closely associated with economic importance of seafood. Sensitivity analyses show that scores are robust to several model assumptions, but highly sensitive to choice of reference points and, for fisheries, extent of time series available to estimate landings. We show how results for sustainable seafood may be interpreted and used, and we evaluate which modifications show the greatest potential for improvements.

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Steven K. Katona

Conservation International

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Jameal F. Samhouri

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Andrew A. Rosenberg

Union of Concerned Scientists

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Kristin M. Kleisner

University of British Columbia

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