. .

Human exclusion from rocky shores in a mediterranean marine protected area (MPA): An opportunity to investigate the effects of trampling

TitleHuman exclusion from rocky shores in a mediterranean marine protected area (MPA): An opportunity to investigate the effects of trampling
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsCasu, Ceccherelli, Curini-Galletti, Castelli
JournalMarine Environmental Research
Start Page15-32
KeywordsAsinara, assemblage, benthic invertebrate, human impact, impact, invertebrate, island, Italy, marine protected area, Mediterranean sea, protected area, rocky shore, Sardinia, tourism, trampling, visitation, western Mediterranean
Abstract

The effect of human trampling on the abundance of small invertebrates inhabiting rocky shallow bottoms was studied at Asinara Island MPA. To this aim we have conducted two experiments. The first was a quantitative study and tested the hypothesis that small invertebrates are more abundant at no-entry locations than at the location visited by tourists through time (before, during and after tourist season). The second was a manipulative experiment and tested the hypothesis that the abundance of small invertebrates is indirectly related to experimental trampling intensities.The effect due to tourist visitation was not highlighted on overall assemblages, suggesting that present seasonal tourist load at the MPA does not cause a significantly negative effect on the zoobenthic community studied. Although tourists exhibited trampling activity at the visited location, none of taxa examined showed a significant lower abundance during and strictly after the end of seasonal tourism peak in the visited location, rather than at control locations. However, results obtained with the second experiment suggested that the effects of different experimental trampling intensities on small invertebrates were variable among taxa. The experimental trampling caused immediate declines in the density of tanaids, nematodes, acari, bivalves, gammarids, echinoderms, isopods, and harpacticoids. For some of these taxa a recovery in abundance was observed within one month.

Mail