Final Report Summary - EFH-GIS (The identification and mapping of Essential Fish Habitats using Geographic Information Systems)
Being the vital first step in the determination of EFHs, habitat modelling is a key and well-established tool for resource management and conservation planning, and for understanding the effects of changing environmental conditions on species biogeographical distributions. In the light of global climate change, a deteriorating marine environment and the decline of many fish stocks worldwide and particularly in the Mediterranean, habitat modelling and its derived EFH designation and protection are key tools for the long-term preservation of fish stocks, and ultimately, of marine biodiversity as a whole.
The intention of the EFH-GIS (the identification and mapping of Essential Fish Habitats using Geographic Information Systems) project was to bolster the spatial component of fisheries management by applying an interdisciplinary environmental approach to the mapping and designation of EFHs in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, an area that supports commercially important fisheries The research project further developed current habitat modelling approaches by taking into account the environmental characteristics of habitat descriptors and the physical-biological oceanography of species-utilised habitat regions. The work was based on the latest interdisciplinary advances in habitat modelling (including their spatiotemporal changes), which included (i) relatively recent technologies, such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Earth Observation techniques, and (ii)'state of the art'statistical methodologies applied to remotely-sensed satellite imagery and fisheries biological data. Habitat modelling results were then used as input in a pilot study into the design of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). The European Commission aims to achieve sustainable development by reconciling the economic, social and environmental dimensions of the exploitation of the seas. The designation of MPAs to protect EFHs is of interest to everyone who is concerned, more or less directly, about healthy coastal and offshore ecosystems, and also sustainable coastal social economies. The underlying reason for protecting EFHs is, indeed, to promote the long-term sustainability of marine fishery resources and biodiversity as a whole.
Project's Internet site: http://arch. her. hcmr. gr/efhgis/
Scientist in charge:
Vasilis Valavanis
Marine Geographic Information Systems
Hellenic Centre for Marine Research
P. O. BOX 2214
71003 Heraklion
Greece
Tel: + (30) 2810 337817
E-mail: vasilis@hcmr. gr
Internet sites: http://arch. her. hcmr. gr, http://www.hcmr. gr
Marie-Curie Fellow:
Dr. Corinne Martin
Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Inland Waters
Hellenic Centre for Marine Research
P. O. BOX 2214%% 71003 Heraklion
Greece
Tel: (+ 30) 2810 337715
E-mail: corinne@hcmr. gr, corinne. sophie. martin@gmail.com
Internet sites: http://www.linkedin.com/in/corinnesophiemartin
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