Extending Vulnerability Assessment to Include Life Stages Considerations

PLoS One. 2016 Jul 14;11(7):e0158917. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158917. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

Species are experiencing a suite of novel stressors from anthropogenic activities that have impacts at multiple scales. Vulnerability assessment is one tool to evaluate the likely impacts that these stressors pose to species so that high-vulnerability cases can be identified and prioritized for monitoring, protection, or mitigation. Commonly used semi-quantitative methods lack a framework to explicitly account for differences in exposure to stressors and organism responses across life stages. Here we propose a modification to commonly used spatial vulnerability assessment methods that includes such an approach, using ocean acidification in the California Current as an illustrative case study. Life stage considerations were included by assessing vulnerability of each life stage to ocean acidification and were used to estimate population vulnerability in two ways. We set population vulnerability equal to: (1) the maximum stage vulnerability and (2) a weighted mean across all stages, with weights calculated using Lefkovitch matrix models. Vulnerability was found to vary across life stages for the six species explored in this case study: two krill-Euphausia pacifica and Thysanoessa spinifera, pteropod-Limacina helicina, pink shrimp-Pandalus jordani, Dungeness crab-Metacarcinus magister and Pacific hake-Merluccius productus. The maximum vulnerability estimates ranged from larval to subadult and adult stages with no consistent stage having maximum vulnerability across species. Similarly, integrated vulnerability metrics varied greatly across species. A comparison showed that some species had vulnerabilities that were similar between the two metrics, while other species' vulnerabilities varied substantially between the two metrics. These differences primarily resulted from cases where the most vulnerable stage had a low relative weight. We compare these methods and explore circumstances where each method may be appropriate.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Brachyura
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Endangered Species* / statistics & numerical data
  • Euphausiacea
  • Gadiformes
  • Life Cycle Stages*
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Pandalidae
  • Population

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program under Grant No. DGE-1256082 to EEH and by the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, and NOAA Ocean Acidification Program, grant No. NA12NOS4780147 to EEH, TEE and ICK. Additional funding was provided to EEH through the University of Washington Graduate School Top Scholar Award (no grant number associated with this funding). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.