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Dive into the research topics where Octavio Aburto-Oropeza is active.

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Featured researches published by Octavio Aburto-Oropeza.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Mangroves in the Gulf of California increase fishery yields

Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Exequiel Ezcurra; Gustavo Danemann; Víctor Valdez; Jason Murray; Enric Sala

Mangroves are disappearing rapidly worldwide despite their well documented biodiversity and the ecosystem services they provide. Failure to link ecological processes and their societal benefits has favored highly destructive aquaculture and tourism developments that threaten mangroves and result in costly “externalities.” Specifically, the potentially irreparable damage to fisheries because of mangrove loss has been belittled and is greatly underestimated. Here, we show that, in the Gulf of California, fisheries landings are positively related to the local abundance of mangroves and, in particular, to the productive area in the mangrove–water fringe that is used as nursery and/or feeding grounds by many commercial species. Mangrove-related fish and crab species account for 32% of the small-scale fisheries landings in the region. The annual economic median value of these fisheries is US


PLOS Biology | 2011

Global human footprint on the linkage between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in reef fishes.

Camilo Mora; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Arturo Ayala Bocos; Paula M. Ayotte; Stuart Banks; Andrew G. Bauman; Maria Beger; Sandra Bessudo; David J. Booth; Eran Brokovich; Andrew J. Brooks; Pascale Chabanet; Joshua E. Cinner; Jorge Cortés; Juan José Cruz-Motta; Amílcar Leví Cupul Magaña; Edward E. DeMartini; Graham J. Edgar; David A. Feary; Sebastian C. A. Ferse; Alan M. Friedlander; Kevin J. Gaston; Charlotte Gough; Nicholas A. J. Graham; Alison Green; Hector M. Guzman; Marah J. Hardt; Michel Kulbicki; Yves Letourneur; Andres López Pérez

37,500 per hectare of mangrove fringe, falling within the higher end of values previously calculated worldwide for all mangrove services together. The ten-year discounted value of one hectare of fringe is >300 times the official cost set by the Mexican government. The destruction of mangroves has a strong economic impact on local fishing communities and on food production in the region. Our valuation of the services provided by mangroves may prove useful in making appropriate decisions for a more efficient and sustainable use of wetlands.


Fisheries | 2004

Fishing Down Coastal Food Webs in the Gulf of California

Enric Sala; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Miriam Reza; Gustavo Paredes; Luis G. López-Lemus

A global survey of reef fishes shows that the consequences of biodiversity loss are greater than previously anticipated as ecosystem functioning remained unsaturated with the addition of new species. Additionally, reefs worldwide, particularly those most diverse, are highly vulnerable to human impacts that are widespread and likely to worsen due to ongoing coastal overpopulation.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Large recovery of fish biomass in a no-take marine reserve

Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Brad Erisman; Grantly R. Galland; Ismael Mascareñas-Osorio; Enric Sala; Exequiel Ezcurra

Abstract We used information from interviews with fishers, fisheries statistics, and field surveys to document changes in fisheries and fish assemblages in shallow coastal habitats in the Gulf of California, Mexico. Coastal food webs in the Gulf of California have been “fished down” during the last 30 years–fisheries shifted from large, long-lived species belonging to high trophic levels to small short-lived species from lower trophic levels. In addition, the maximum individual length of the landings has decreased about 45 cm in only 20 years. Although some catches are stagnant or still increasing for some species groups, catch-per-unit-effort declined for most species groups after 1980. These declines were associated to a dramatic increase in fishing effort in the region in the late 1970s-early 1980s, mostly in the number of gillnets. Fishing not only impacted target species, but also caused community-wide changes. These results suggest that coastal fisheries in the Gulf of California are unsustainable a...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Operationalizing the social-ecological systems framework to assess sustainability

Heather M. Leslie; Xavier Basurto; Mateja Nenadovic; Leila Sievanen; Kyle C. Cavanaugh; Juan José Cota-Nieto; Brad Erisman; Elena M. Finkbeiner; Gustavo Hinojosa-Arango; Marcia Moreno-Báez; Sriniketh Nagavarapu; Sheila M.W. Reddy; Alexandra Sánchez-Rodríguez; Katherine Siegel; José Juan Ulibarria-Valenzuela; Amy Hudson Weaver; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza

No-take marine reserves are effective management tools used to restore fish biomass and community structure in areas depleted by overfishing. Cabo Pulmo National Park (CPNP) was created in 1995 and is the only well enforced no-take area in the Gulf of California, Mexico, mostly because of widespread support from the local community. In 1999, four years after the establishment of the reserve, there were no significant differences in fish biomass between CPNP (0.75 t ha−1 on average) and other marine protected areas or open access areas in the Gulf of California. By 2009, total fish biomass at CPNP had increased to 4.24 t ha−1 (absolute biomass increase of 3.49 t ha−1, or 463%), and the biomass of top predators and carnivores increased by 11 and 4 times, respectively. However, fish biomass did not change significantly in other marine protected areas or open access areas over the same time period. The absolute increase in fish biomass at CPNP within a decade is the largest measured in a marine reserve worldwide, and it is likely due to a combination of social (strong community leadership, social cohesion, effective enforcement) and ecological factors. The recovery of fish biomass inside CPNP has resulted in significant economic benefits, indicating that community-managed marine reserves are a viable solution to unsustainable coastal development and fisheries collapse in the Gulf of California and elsewhere.


Ecology | 2007

PREDICTABILITY OF REEF FISH RECRUITMENT IN A HIGHLY VARIABLE NURSERY HABITAT

Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Enric Sala; Gustavo Paredes; Abraham Mendoza; Enric Ballesteros

Significance Meeting human needs while sustaining ecosystems and the benefits they provide is a global challenge. Coastal marine systems present a particularly important case, given that >50% of the world’s population lives within 100 km of the coast and fisheries are the primary source of protein for >1 billion people worldwide. Our integrative analysis here yields an understanding of the sustainability of coupled social-ecological systems that is quite distinct from that provided by either the biophysical or the social sciences alone and that illustrates the feasibility and value of operationalizing the social-ecological systems framework for comparative analyses of coupled systems, particularly in data-poor and developing nation settings. Environmental governance is more effective when the scales of ecological processes are well matched with the human institutions charged with managing human–environment interactions. The social-ecological systems (SESs) framework provides guidance on how to assess the social and ecological dimensions that contribute to sustainable resource use and management, but rarely if ever has been operationalized for multiple localities in a spatially explicit, quantitative manner. Here, we use the case of small-scale fisheries in Baja California Sur, Mexico, to identify distinct SES regions and test key aspects of coupled SESs theory. Regions that exhibit greater potential for social-ecological sustainability in one dimension do not necessarily exhibit it in others, highlighting the importance of integrative, coupled system analyses when implementing spatial planning and other ecosystem-based strategies.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Spatio-temporal dynamics of a fish spawning aggregation and its fishery in the Gulf of California

Brad Erisman; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Charlotte E. González-Abraham; Ismael Mascareñas-Osorio; Marcia Moreno-Báez; Philip A. Hastings

There has been a lengthy debate on whether the abundance of adult reef fishes depends on prerecruitment or postrecruitment processes; however, we still do not have the ability to predict the magnitude of local fish recruitment. Here we show that the success of the leopard grouper (Mycteroperca rosacea) recruitment in the Gulf of California, Mexico, is determined by the availability of nursery habitat, which in turn is strongly correlated to climate conditions. Observational and experimental studies showed that leopard grouper larvae recruit preferentially on shallow rocky bottoms with brown algal (Sargassum spp.) beds, and that abundance of recruits is determined by the availability of Sargassum. The biomass of Sargassum decreases linearly with an increase in the Multivariate El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Index (MEI; an index positively correlated with water temperature and negatively correlated with nutrient availability). We analyzed the relationship between the interannual variation of MEI and the recruitment of the leopard grouper using field estimates of abundance of juvenile groupers. Our results show that there is a nonlinear relationship between recruitment and the oceanographic climate, in that the density of recruits decreases exponentially with increasing MEI. The predictability of leopard grouper recruitment has important implications for fisheries management, since it could allow adaptive management without expensive stock assessment programs.


PeerJ | 2014

Asymmetric connectivity of spawning aggregations of a commercially important marine fish using a multidisciplinary approach

Adrian Munguia-Vega; Alexis M. Jackson; S.G. Marinone; Brad Erisman; Marcia Moreno-Báez; Alfredo Giron-Nava; Tad Pfister; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Jorge Torre

We engaged in cooperative research with fishers and stakeholders to characterize the fine-scale, spatio-temporal characteristics of spawning behavior in an aggregating marine fish (Cynoscion othonopterus: Sciaenidae) and coincident activities of its commercial fishery in the Upper Gulf of California. Approximately 1.5–1.8 million fish are harvested annually from spawning aggregations of C. othonopterus during 21–25 days of fishing and within an area of 1,149 km2 of a biosphere reserve. Spawning and fishing are synchronized on a semi-lunar cycle, with peaks in both occurring 5 to 2 days before the new and full moon, and fishing intensity and catch are highest at the spawning grounds within a no-take reserve. Results of this study demonstrate the benefits of combining GPS data loggers, fisheries data, biological surveys, and cooperative research with fishers to produce spatio-temporally explicit information relevant to the science and management of fish spawning aggregations and the spatial planning of marine reserves.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Coastal landforms and accumulation of mangrove peat increase carbon sequestration and storage

Paula Ezcurra; Exequiel Ezcurra; Pedro P. Garcillán; Matthew T. Costa; Octavio Aburto-Oropeza

Understanding patterns of larval dispersal is key in determining whether no-take marine reserves are self-sustaining, what will be protected inside reserves and where the benefits of reserves will be observed. We followed a multidisciplinary approach that merged detailed descriptions of fishing zones and spawning time at 17 sites distributed in the Midriff Island region of the Gulf of California with a biophysical oceanographic model that simulated larval transport at Pelagic Larval Duration (PLD) 14, 21 and 28 days for the most common and targeted predatory reef fish, (leopard grouper Mycteroperca rosacea). We tested the hypothesis that source–sink larval metapopulation dynamics describing the direction and frequency of larval dispersal according to an oceanographic model can help to explain empirical genetic data. We described modeled metapopulation dynamics using graph theory and employed empirical sequence data from a subset of 11 sites at two mitochondrial genes to verify the model predictions based on patterns of genetic diversity within sites and genetic structure between sites. We employed a population graph describing a network of genetic relationships among sites and contrasted it against modeled networks. While our results failed to explain genetic diversity within sites, they confirmed that ocean models summarized via graph and adjacency distances over modeled networks can explain seemingly chaotic patterns of genetic structure between sites. Empirical and modeled networks showed significant similarities in the clustering coefficients of each site and adjacency matrices between sites. Most of the connectivity patterns observed towards downstream sites (Sonora coast) were strictly asymmetric, while those between upstream sites (Baja and the Midriffs) were symmetric. The best-supported gene flow model and analyses of modularity of the modeled networks confirmed a pulse of larvae from the Baja Peninsula, across the Midriff Island region and towards the Sonoran coastline that acts like a larval sink, in agreement with the cyclonic gyre (anti-clockwise) present at the peak of spawning (May–June). Our approach provided a mechanistic explanation of the location of fishing zones: most of the largest areas where fishing takes place seem to be sustained simultaneously by high levels of local retention, contribution of larvae from upstream sites and oceanographic patterns that concentrate larval density from all over the region. The general asymmetry in marine connectivity observed highlights that benefits from reserves are biased towards particular directions, that no-take areas need to be located upstream of targeted fishing zones, and that some fishing localities might not directly benefit from avoiding fishing within reserves located adjacent to their communities. We discuss the implications of marine connectivity for the current network of marine protected areas and no-take zones, and identify ways of improving it.


Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2000

Feeding behavior, habitat use, and abundance of the angelfish Holacanthus passer (Pomacanthidae) in the southern Sea of Cortés

Octavio Aburto-Oropeza; Enric Sala; Carlos Armando Sánchez-Ortíz

Significance Despite their small height and stunted appearance, mangroves along the desert coasts of Baja California have compensated for sea-level rise during the last two millennia by accreting on their own root remains. In doing so, they have accumulated very large amounts of carbon in their sediments (900–3,000 Mg C/ha), often higher than that accumulated under tall, lush, tropical mangrove forests. Mangroves represent the largest carbon sink per unit area in Mexico’s northern drylands. Our results highlight the global importance of mangrove conservation in this region. Given their relatively small area, mangroves and their organic sediments are of disproportionate importance to global carbon sequestration and carbon storage. Peat deposition and preservation allows some mangroves to accrete vertically and keep pace with sea-level rise by growing on their own root remains. In this study we show that mangroves in desert inlets in the coasts of the Baja California have been accumulating root peat for nearly 2,000 y and harbor a belowground carbon content of 900–34,00 Mg C/ha, with an average value of 1,130 (± 128) Mg C/ha, and a belowground carbon accumulation similar to that found under some of the tallest tropical mangroves in the Mexican Pacific coast. The depth–age curve for the mangrove sediments of Baja California indicates that sea level in the peninsula has been rising at a mean rate of 0.70 mm/y (± 0.07) during the last 17 centuries, a value similar to the rates of sea-level rise estimated for the Caribbean during a comparable period. By accreting on their own accumulated peat, these desert mangroves store large amounts of carbon in their sediments. We estimate that mangroves and halophyte scrubs in Mexico’s arid northwest, with less than 1% of the terrestrial area, store in their belowground sediments around 28% of the total belowground carbon pool of the whole region.

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Brad Erisman

University of Texas at Austin

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Enric Sala

Spanish National Research Council

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Andrew F. Johnson

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

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Ismael Mascareñas-Osorio

Autonomous University of Baja California

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Gustavo Paredes

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

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