Intensive temporal and spatial sampling of polychaete biodiversity reveals significant implications for impact assessment and marine park design
Nathan A. Knott,
Daniel S. Swadling,
Matthew J. Rees
et al.
Abstract:Intensive temporal and spatial sampling of benthic infauna have rarely been analysed to improve impact assessment or conservation planning. An impact assessment started in the late 1980s in Jervis Bay (Australia) provided a spatially, temporally and taxonomically comprehensive benthic invertebrate dataset. While the proposed development did not eventuate, the area was later declared a multi‐zone marine park.
We specifically used the polychaete data which included nine sampling times (February 1989 to June 1991… Show more
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