TY - JOUR
T1 - Lessons learned by addressing challenges to deep-sea conservation planning in the Southeastern Mediterranean Sea
T2 - linking science to practice
AU - Shabtay, Ateret
AU - Rothschild, Alon
AU - Makovsky, Yizhaq
AU - Neuman, Adi
AU - Bialik, Or
AU - Goren, Liron
AU - Idan, Tal
AU - Slavenko, Alex
AU - Salingré, Shira
AU - Buba, Yehezkel
AU - Guy-Haim, Tamar
AU - Herut, Barak
AU - Stern, Nir
AU - Gertman, Isaac
AU - Gilboa, Merav
AU - Gal, Gideon
AU - Ofir, Eyal
AU - Rubin Blum, Maxim
AU - Berenshtein, Igal
AU - Amir, Dani
AU - Karniel, Tzeela
AU - Belmaker, Jonathan
AU - Ben Lamine, Emna
AU - Giakoumi, Sylvaine
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/8/1
Y1 - 2025/8/1
N2 - Conservation of the offshore and deep sea is an opportunity that exists today but is rapidly being diminished due to offshore development. Establishing networks of marine protected areas is crucial for conserving biodiversity and enhancing ecosystem resilience to climate change. In response to these needs, we conducted a two-year conservation planning process within Israel's exclusive economic zone in the Southeastern Mediterranean Sea, addressing challenges such as significant data gaps, poor governance, and limited management capabilities. This initiative was led by a local nongovernmental organization (NGO) in collaboration with research institutes. We employed a multidisciplinary approach that integrated existing data through advanced statistical tools, spatial and food-web modeling, and spatial prioritization tools. The plan proposes the establishment of ten protected areas covering 30 % of the exclusive economic zone. The plan prioritizes protection of vulnerable benthic habitats, diverse pelagic regions, and potential climatic refugia while minimizing socioeconomic conflicts. Based on our experience, we provide recommendations on how to incorporate key factors for advancing marine conservation, particularly of ecosystems that are generally out of sight and out of mind of policy makers and the general public. These factors include collaboration across sectors (non-governmental organizations, academia, research institutes, international experts, and governmental ministries), reliance on the best available scientific data, extensive stakeholder engagement, and a planning approach that explicitly allows for adjustments and revisions based on new data and evolving conditions. Our results demonstrate an innovative NGO-driven approach to conservation planning that can guide the establishment of deep-sea protected areas in data-limited and governance-challenged marine regions.
AB - Conservation of the offshore and deep sea is an opportunity that exists today but is rapidly being diminished due to offshore development. Establishing networks of marine protected areas is crucial for conserving biodiversity and enhancing ecosystem resilience to climate change. In response to these needs, we conducted a two-year conservation planning process within Israel's exclusive economic zone in the Southeastern Mediterranean Sea, addressing challenges such as significant data gaps, poor governance, and limited management capabilities. This initiative was led by a local nongovernmental organization (NGO) in collaboration with research institutes. We employed a multidisciplinary approach that integrated existing data through advanced statistical tools, spatial and food-web modeling, and spatial prioritization tools. The plan proposes the establishment of ten protected areas covering 30 % of the exclusive economic zone. The plan prioritizes protection of vulnerable benthic habitats, diverse pelagic regions, and potential climatic refugia while minimizing socioeconomic conflicts. Based on our experience, we provide recommendations on how to incorporate key factors for advancing marine conservation, particularly of ecosystems that are generally out of sight and out of mind of policy makers and the general public. These factors include collaboration across sectors (non-governmental organizations, academia, research institutes, international experts, and governmental ministries), reliance on the best available scientific data, extensive stakeholder engagement, and a planning approach that explicitly allows for adjustments and revisions based on new data and evolving conditions. Our results demonstrate an innovative NGO-driven approach to conservation planning that can guide the establishment of deep-sea protected areas in data-limited and governance-challenged marine regions.
KW - 30x30 target
KW - Benthic and pelagic habitats
KW - Exclusive economic zone
KW - Marine protected areas
KW - Spatial prioritization
KW - Stakeholder engagement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004911757&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2025.107700
DO - 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2025.107700
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0964-5691
VL - 267
JO - Ocean and Coastal Management
JF - Ocean and Coastal Management
M1 - 107700
ER -