An atlas of seabed biodiversity for Aotearoa New Zealand
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Published:2023-09-05
Issue:9
Volume:15
Page:3931-3939
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ISSN:1866-3516
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Container-title:Earth System Science Data
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Sci. Data
Author:
Stephenson FabriceORCID, Brough TomORCID, Lohrer Drew, Leduc Daniel, Geange Shane, Anderson Owen, Bowden David, Clark Malcolm R., Davey Niki, Pardo Enrique, Gordon Dennis P., Finucci Brittany, Kelly Michelle, Macpherson DianaORCID, McCartain Lisa, Mills SadieORCID, Neill Kate, Nelson Wendy, Peart RachaelORCID, Pinkerton Matthew H., Read Geoffrey B.ORCID, Robertson Jodie, Rowden Ashley, Schnabel KareenORCID, Stewart Andrew, Struthers Carl, Tait LeighORCID, Tracey Di, Weston Shaun, Lundquist CarolynORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The waters of Aotearoa New Zealand span over 4.2 million km2 of the South Pacific Ocean and harbour a rich diversity of seafloor-associated taxa. Due to the immensity and remoteness of the area, there are significant gaps in the availability of data that can be used to quantify and map the distribution of seafloor and demersal biodiversity, limiting effective management. In this study, we describe the development and accessibility of an online atlas of seabed biodiversity that aims to fill these gaps. Species distribution models were developed for 579 taxa across four taxonomic groups: demersal fish, reef fish, subtidal invertebrates and macroalgae. Spatial layers for taxa distribution based on habitat suitability were statistically validated and then, as a further check, evaluated by taxonomic experts to provide measures of confidence to guide the future use of these layers. Spatially explicit uncertainty (SD) layers were also developed for each taxon distribution. We generated layer-specific metadata, including statistical and expert evaluation scores, which were uploaded alongside the accompanying spatial layers to the open access database Zenodo. This database provides the most comprehensive source of information on the distribution of seafloor taxa for Aotearoa New Zealand and is thus a valuable resource for managers, researchers and the public that will guide the management and conservation of seafloor communities. The atlas of seabed biodiversity for Aotearoa New Zealand is freely accessible via the open-access database Zenodo under https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7083642 (Stephenson et al., 2022).
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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