Eric J. Conklin
The Nature Conservancy
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Featured researches published by Eric J. Conklin.
PeerJ | 2013
Gareth J. Williams; Jennifer E. Smith; Eric J. Conklin; Jamison M. Gove; Enric Sala; Stuart A. Sandin
Kingman Reef and Palmyra Atoll in the central Pacific are among the most remote coral reefs on the planet. Here we describe spatial patterns in their benthic communities across reef habitats and depths, and consider these in the context of oceanographic gradients. Benthic communities at both locations were dominated by calcifying organisms (54–86% cover), namely hard corals (20–74%) and crustose coralline algae (CCA) (10–36%). While turf algae were relatively common at both locations (8–22%), larger fleshy macroalgae were virtually absent at Kingman (<1%) and rare at Palmyra (0.7–9.3%). Hard coral cover was higher, but with low diversity, in more sheltered habitats such as Palmyra’s backreef and Kingman’s patch reefs. Almost exclusive dominance by slow-growing Porites on Kingman’s patch reefs provides indirect evidence of competitive exclusion, probably late in a successional sequence. In contrast, the more exposed forereef habitats at both Kingman and Palmyra had higher coral diversity and were characterized by fast-growing corals (e.g., Acropora and Pocillopora), indicative of more dynamic environments. In general at both locations, soft coral cover increased with depth, likely reflecting increasingly efficient heterotrophic abilities. CCA and fleshy macroalgae cover decreased with depth, likely due to reduced light. Cover of other calcified macroalgae, predominantly Halimeda, increased with depth. This likely reflects the ability of many calcifying macroalgae to efficiently harvest light at deeper depths, in combination with an increased nutrient supply from upwelling promoting growth. At Palmyra, patterns of hard coral cover with depth were inconsistent, but cover peaked at mid-depths at Kingman. On Kingman’s forereef, benthic community composition was strongly related to wave energy, with hard coral cover decreasing and becoming more spatially clustered with increased wave energy, likely as a result of physical damage leading to patches of coral in localized shelter. In contrast, the cover of turf algae at Kingman was positively related to wave energy, reflecting their ability to rapidly colonize newly available space. No significant patterns with wave energy were observed on Palmyra’s forereef, suggesting that a more detailed model is required to study biophysical coupling there. Kingman, Palmyra, and other remote oceanic reefs provide interesting case studies to explore biophysical influences on benthic ecology and dynamics.
PLOS ONE | 2015
John N. Kittinger; Lida Teneva; Haruko Koike; Kostantinos A. Stamoulis; Daniela S. Kittinger; Kirsten L.L. Oleson; Eric J. Conklin; Mahana Gomes; Bart Wilcox; Alan M. Friedlander
Ocean and coastal ecosystems provide critical fisheries, coastal protection, and cultural benefits to communities worldwide, but these services are diminishing due to local and global threats. In response, place-based strategies involve communities and resource users in management have proliferated. Here, we present a transferable community-based approach to assess the social and ecological factors affecting resource sustainability and food security in a small-scale, coral reef fishery. Our results show that this small-scale fishery provides large-scale benefits to communities, including 7,353 ± 1547 kg yr-1 (mean ± SE) of seafood per year, equating to >30,000 meals with an economic value of
Scientific Reports | 2017
Darcy Bradley; Eric J. Conklin; Yannis P. Papastamatiou; Douglas J. McCauley; Kydd Pollock; Amanda Pollock; Bruce E. Kendall; Steven D. Gaines; Jennifer E. Caselle
78,432. The vast majority of the catch is used for subsistence, contributing to community food security: 58% is kept, 33.5% is given away, and 8.5% is sold. Our spatial analysis assesses the geographic distribution of community beneficiaries from the fishery (the “food shed” for the fishery), and we document that 20% of seafood procured from the fishery is used for sociocultural events that are important for social cohesion. This approach provides a method for assessing social, economic, and cultural values provided by small-scale food systems, as well as important contributions to food security, with significant implications for conservation and management. This interdisciplinary effort aims to demonstrate a transferable participatory research approach useful for resource-dependent communities as they cope with socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental change.
Coral Reefs | 2011
Gareth J. Williams; Ingrid S. Knapp; Thierry M. Work; Eric J. Conklin
What did coral reef ecosystems look like before human impacts became pervasive? Early efforts to reconstruct baselines resulted in the controversial suggestion that pristine coral reefs have inverted trophic pyramids, with disproportionally large top predator biomass. The validity of the coral reef inverted trophic pyramid has been questioned, but until now, was not resolved empirically. We use data from an eight-year tag-recapture program with spatially explicit, capture-recapture models to re-examine the population size and density of a key top predator at Palmyra atoll, the same location that inspired the idea of inverted trophic biomass pyramids in coral reef ecosystems. Given that animal movement is suspected to have significantly biased early biomass estimates of highly mobile top predators, we focused our reassessment on the most mobile and most abundant predator at Palmyra, the grey reef shark (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos). We estimated a density of 21.3 (95% CI 17.8, 24.7) grey reef sharks/km2, which is an order of magnitude lower than the estimates that suggested an inverted trophic pyramid. Our results indicate that the trophic structure of an unexploited reef fish community is not inverted, and that even healthy top predator populations may be considerably smaller, and more precarious, than previously thought.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Jade M. S. Delevaux; Robert Whittier; Kostantinos A. Stamoulis; Leah L. Bremer; Stacy D. Jupiter; Alan M. Friedlander; Matthew Poti; Greg Guannel; Natalie Kurashima; Kawika Winter; Robert J. Toonen; Eric J. Conklin; Chad Wiggins; Anders Knudby; Whitney Goodell; Kimberly Burnett; Susan Yee; Hla Htun; Kirsten L.L. Oleson; Tracy N. Wiegner; Tamara Ticktin
In October 2009, a mild bleaching event occurred at Palmyra Atoll (05 52¢ N 162 05¢ W) in association with the strengthening of the 2009 El Niño-Southern Oscillation (Williams et al. 2010). Studies have shown coral disease outbreaks can follow thermal stress events on reefs (Bruno et al. 2007). Although bleaching prevalence within the genus Acropora was relatively low at Palmyra (<10%), an outbreak of acute tissue loss disease was identified in February 2010 affecting plating Acropora on the shallow (<5 m) western reef terrace and northern backreef of the atoll (Fig. 1a, b). Field signs were consistent with Acropora white syndrome (AWS) reports from other parts of the Indo-Pacific (Aeby et al. 2011). This is the first report of such a disease at Palmyra since regular disease monitoring began in 2007. AWS prevalence within a permanent transect (200 m) on the northern backreef equaled 0% (July 08, Oct 08, Jul 09, Oct 09), 6.3% (Feb 10), and 22.9% (Jul 10) (n 1⁄4 35–48 Acropora colonies across survey periods). On the western reef terrace, prevalence of AWS within 48 monitored A. cytherea colonies increased from 0% in Oct 2009 to 25% in July 2010, with four colonies experiencing over 50% tissue loss. Histopathology of A. cytherea with AWS from Palmyra (n 1⁄4 3) revealed dissociation of the gastrodermis with the liberation of zooxanthellae into the gastrovascular cavity and canals or wound repair (Fig. 1c). Although Palmyra’s reefs are protected under US federal law and free from direct anthropogenic stressors, they are clearly not immune from the effects of global climate change and efforts are urgently needed to determine the etiology and dynamics of this destructive disease.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Darcy Bradley; Eric J. Conklin; Yannis P. Papastamatiou; Douglas J. McCauley; Kydd Pollock; Bruce E. Kendall; Steven D. Gaines; Jennifer E. Caselle
Declining natural resources have led to a cultural renaissance across the Pacific that seeks to revive customary ridge-to-reef management approaches to protect freshwater and restore abundant coral reef fisheries. Effective ridge-to-reef management requires improved understanding of land-sea linkages and decision-support tools to simultaneously evaluate the effects of terrestrial and marine drivers on coral reefs, mediated by anthropogenic activities. Although a few applications have linked the effects of land cover to coral reefs, these are too coarse in resolution to inform watershed-scale management for Pacific Islands. To address this gap, we developed a novel linked land-sea modeling framework based on local data, which coupled groundwater and coral reef models at fine spatial resolution, to determine the effects of terrestrial drivers (groundwater and nutrients), mediated by human activities (land cover/use), and marine drivers (waves, geography, and habitat) on coral reefs. We applied this framework in two ‘ridge-to-reef’ systems (Hā‘ena and Ka‘ūpūlehu) subject to different natural disturbance regimes, located in the Hawaiian Archipelago. Our results indicated that coral reefs in Ka‘ūpūlehu are coral-dominated with many grazers and scrapers due to low rainfall and wave power. While coral reefs in Hā‘ena are dominated by crustose coralline algae with many grazers and less scrapers due to high rainfall and wave power. In general, Ka‘ūpūlehu is more vulnerable to land-based nutrients and coral bleaching than Hā‘ena due to high coral cover and limited dilution and mixing from low rainfall and wave power. However, the shallow and wave sheltered back-reef areas of Hā‘ena, which support high coral cover and act as nursery habitat for fishes, are also vulnerable to land-based nutrients and coral bleaching. Anthropogenic sources of nutrients located upstream from these vulnerable areas are relevant locations for nutrient mitigation, such as cesspool upgrades. In this study, we located coral reefs vulnerable to land-based nutrients and linked them to priority areas to manage sources of human-derived nutrients, thereby demonstrating how this framework can inform place-based ridge-to-reef management.
Biological Invasions | 2005
Eric J. Conklin; Jennifer E. Smith
For broadly distributed, often overexploited species such as elasmobranchs (sharks and rays), conservation management would benefit from understanding how life history traits change in response to local environmental and ecological factors. However, fishing obfuscates this objective by causing complex and often mixed effects on the life histories of target species. Disentangling the many drivers of life history variability requires knowledge of elasmobranch populations in the absence of fishing, which is rarely available. Here, we describe the growth, maximum size, sex ratios, size at maturity, and offer a direct estimate of survival of an unfished population of grey reef sharks (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos) using data from an eight year tag-recapture study. We then synthesized published information on the life history of C. amblyrhynchos from across its geographic range, and for the first time, we attempted to disentangle the contribution of fishing from geographic variation in an elasmobranch species. For Palmyra’s unfished C. amblyrhynchos population, the von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF) growth coefficient k was 0.05 and asymptotic length L∞ was 163.3 cm total length (TL). Maximum size was 175.5 cm TL from a female shark, length at maturity was estimated at 116.7–123.2 cm TL for male sharks, maximum lifespan estimated from VBGF parameters was 18.1 years for both sexes combined, and annual survival was 0.74 year-1. Consistent with findings from studies on other elasmobranch species, we found significant intraspecific variability in reported life history traits of C. amblyrhynchos. However, contrary to what others have reported, we did not find consistent patterns in life history variability as a function of biogeography or fishing. Ultimately, the substantial, but not yet predictable variability in life history traits observed for C. amblyrhynchos across its geographic range suggests that regional management may be necessary to set sustainable harvest targets and to recover this and other shark species globally.
Pacific Science | 2004
Jennifer E. Smith; Cynthia L. Hunter; Eric J. Conklin; Rebecca Most; Thomas Sauvage; Cheryl Squair; Celia M. Smith
Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2018
Alan M. Friedlander; Mary K. Donovan; Kostantinos A. Stamoulis; Ivor D. Williams; Eric K. Brown; Eric J. Conklin; Edward E. DeMartini; Kuulei S. Rodgers; Russell T. Sparks; William J. Walsh
Pacific Science | 2004
Eric J. Conklin; John Stimson