Identifying management opportunities to combat climate, land, and marine threats across less climate exposed coral reefs

Conserving coral reefs is critical for maintaining marine biodiversity, protecting coastlines, and supporting livelihoods in many coastal communities. Climate change threatens coral reefs globally, but researchers have identified a portfolio of coral reefs (bioclimatic units [BCUs]) that are relatively less exposed to climate impacts and strongly connected to other coral reef systems. These reefs provide a proactive opportunity to secure a long‐term future for coral reefs under climate change. To help guide local management efforts, we quantified marine cumulative human impact (CHI) from climate, marine, and land pressures (2013 and from 2008 to 2013) in BCUs and across countries tasked with BCU management. Additionally, we created a management index based on common management measures and policies for each pressure source (climate, marine, and land) to identify a country's intent and commitment to effectively manage these pressures. Twenty‐two countries (79%) had increases in CHI from 2008 to 2013. Climate change pressures had the highest proportional contribution to CHI across all reefs and in all but one country (Singapore), but 18 BCUs (35%) and nine countries containing BCUs (32%) had relatively high land and marine impacts. There was a significant positive relationship between climate impact and the climate management index across countries (R2 = 0.43, p = 0.02), potentially signifying that countries with greater climate impacts are more committed to managing them. However, this trend was driven by climate management intent in Fiji and Bangladesh. Our results can be used to guide future fine‐scale analyses, national policies, and local management decisions, and our management indices reveal areas where management components can be improved. Cost‐effectively managing local pressures (e.g., fishing and nutrients) in BCUs is essential for building a climate‐ready future that benefits coral reefs and people.


INTRODUCTION
Coral reef ecosystems have significant social, ecological, and economic value. They contain over 25% of the world's marine life and generate upward of $29.8 billion net benefit per year (Samonte-Tan, 2008), and coral reef fisheries are estimated to support ∼6 million people's livelihoods (Cinner, 2014). However, anthropogenic climate change is driving large-scale transitions of coral reef and associated ecosystems, with an expected loss of 70-90% of reefs by 2050 given 1.5 • C of global warming (IPCC, 2018). Abating or reducing climate change impacts requires global policy coordination and international commitments to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, such as adhering to the global surface temperature goals supported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2018). Global inequalities in both GHG emissions and the location of subsequent impacts make this challenging, especially because the highest emitting countries are generally among the least vulnerable to negative effects of climate change (Althor et al., 2016). Spatial decoupling of GHG emissions and coral stress is particularly true for coral reefs in poorer nations and in the western Indian Ocean (Wolff et al., 2015).
The broad range of environmental and ecological conditions across coral reefs make some areas naturally less exposed to climate change impacts than others. Once identified, these low exposure sites present opportunities to reduce local, direct anthropogenic pressures, and protect the future of coral reefs globally Hoegh-Guldberg et al., 2018). Recent research used clustering algorithms and modern portfolio theory to identify 50 bioclimatic units (BCUs) (i.e., a planning unit containing ∼500 km 2 of reef area), representing ∼31% of BCUs globally that are least exposed to climate change impacts, have the highest capacity to repopulate reefs in the future, and maximize the likelihood of conservation success in the face of climate change . However, the impacts of climate change are just one category of threats facing reefs. For example, overfishing and unsustainable coastal development are generally considered two of the most severe threats to coral reefs by reef experts and managers (Wear 2016). Mitigating local, direct pressures in BCUs is essential for maintaining reef persistence and improving resilience and recovery potential in the future (Anthony et al., 2015;Hoegh-Guldberg et al., 2018).
Local, direct pressures on coral reefs originate from both the land and sea-from sedimentation and land-based nutrient pollution to overfishing and invasive species. In cumulative impact mapping, spatial pressure information can be combined with the spatial distribution of habitats or species to quantify pressures (i.e., stressor intensity weighted by habitat vulnerability) across scales. Pressure information across all stressor and habitat combinations can then be normalized and summed to determine the cumulative impact of all given pressures in an area (Halpern et al., 2008(Halpern et al., , 2015. Previous research has found substantial incongruences exist between pressures and management actions globally (Tulloch et al., 2020). For example, places with high levels of impact from pressures that could be abated by marine protected areas have nearly 60% less marine protected area coverage than low impact areas, making this an urgent area for further research (Kuempel et al., 2019;Stevenson et al., 2020). However, attempts to link threats to potential management intent are still lacking and have yet to be applied to less climate exposed reefs. Such an analysis is particularly timely as nongovernmental and governmental organizations begin to develop management plans in these areas (e.g., WWF Coral Reef Rescue Initiative and Bloomberg Philanthropies Vibrant Oceans Initiative).
Ultimately, environmental pressures and subsequent management responses (or lack thereof) influence the state of coral reefs. We used a global data set on cumulative human impact (CHI) to marine ecosystems (Halpern et al., 2015) to quantify the cumulative impact of climate, land, and marine pressures and the change in pressures from 2008 to 2013 in BCUs and the countries tasked with their management. Further, we created management indices to assess each country's potential intent and commitment to manage impacts in each category. We aimed to identify key disparities between impacts and common management actions and provide information to help allocate conservation resources for further analyses and conservation actions that benefit people and biodiversity.

METHODS
To guide and strengthen management and policy decisions in countries that have BCUs that are less subject to climate change impacts (as identified in Beyer et al., [2018]) (Table 1), we categorized pressures to BCUs based on their source (climate, land, or marine [Appendix S1]) and quantified the cumulative impact of each category in BCUs and across BCUs within countries. We also developed management indices as proxies for the potential commitment of each country to abate impacts for each category. All analyses were performed using R 3.6 (R Core Team, 2020) and the raster and sf packages (Hijmans, 2020;Pebesma, 2018). All data and code used in our analyses are available from https://github.com/cdkuempel/50_reefs_threats.

Bioclimatic units
The BCUs least exposed to climate change impacts were identified by Beyer et al. (2018) using modern portfolio theory and 30 metrics across five data categories (thermal history, projected future conditions, cyclones, connectivity, and recent thermal conditions) (Appendix S2) . From these data, an aggregate suitability score for each BCU was calculated by averaging across combinations of standardized metrics and expert-derived weighting of the relative importance of each data category for informing coral reef conservation planning at an approximately 25 km 2 resolution . Several portfolios of BCUs were then identified using an iterative clustering algorithm that maximized the resilience potential of each BCU (based on the 30 metrics) while minimizing the distance from current members of the cluster of cells, with a set rule allowing a maximum of three BCUs in each marine ecoregion. Each BCU was assigned a BCU identification number (BCUID) ( Table 1). We considered only portions of BCUs that were within 200 nautical miles of the shore to remove portions within terrestrial boundaries that were artifacts of the data resolution of the BCU analysis. This is also the area where marine conservation actions are most often implemented.

Cumulative impact data
We used CHI data from Halpern et al. (2015) to calculate the sum of anthropogenic pressures for the global marine area at a 1-km 2 resolution in 2013 (rescaled by one period) and the change in cumulative impacts from 2008 to 2013 (rescaled by two periods). The CHI data are based on human pressures, and values are calculated as the product of the intensity of a given stressor in a cell and the vulnerability of each habitat type to that stressor in that cell. In addition to total CHI, we calculated the sum of pressures associated with three primary sources of impacts: climate, land, and marine (Appendix S1). Climate impacts were classified as indirect impacts requiring global action, whereas land and marine impacts were direct impacts that are manageable at the local scale. We determined the percent contribution of each category to total CHI in and across BCUs in each country. To identify temporal trends of these impacts, we also calculated the change in overall CHI and each CHI category from 2008 to 2013 in and across BCUs in each country. Several data sets were excluded from the change in CHI analysis: sea-level rise, shipping, invasive species, and ocean pollution pressures did not have data across both periods, and ocean acidification, artisanal fishing, and inorganic pollution did not differ between 2008 and 2013 (Appendix S1).

Management index
To assess the intent and commitment of a country to manage threats from marine, land, and climate impacts, we created a management index for each category across all analyzed countries, similar to Tulloch et al. (2020). Each individual index was calculated as the average of several metrics based on common management approaches for each category (Appendices S3 & S4) that were normalized from 0 to 1 (1, better score; 0, worse score). The climate index included data on the number of ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) strategies in each country, following methods from Giffin et al. (2020); extent to which coastal ecosystems are mentioned in accounting, mitigation, or adaptation in country-level national contributions; and proportional change in carbon dioxide emissions per gross domestic production and per capita from 2005  Each metric component, X, was normalized based on the following equation (X − X min )∕(X max − X min ). The final index for each impact category was considered the average of the component normalized scores. When data were not available for a country, the average score across countries in the same UN geopolitical region (e.g., Southern Asia, Eastern Africa, and Melanesia [UN, 1999]) was used, which is a common approach for estimating missing data for global indices (Frazier et al., 2016). Components of each index were tested for collinearity (Appendix S6). In the marine index, there was a significant positive correlation among countries that are members of the International Coral Reef Initiative and fisheries management (R 2 = 0.44, p = 0.02). Both components, however, were maintained with equal weighting because they represented different aspects of marine conservation efforts (one specifically focused on commitment to coral reef management and the other on broaderscale fisheries management effectiveness) (OECD et al., 2008).

RESULTS
Results are presented below by BCU and averaged across BCUs in each country. We provide an additional assessment of the pressures in individual BCUs in each country in Appendix S7.
Climate change had the greatest contribution to overall CHI scores across all BCUs, for a mean of 69% (SD 12.4) of cumulative impact (Figure 2). The percentage of impacts attributed to climate change pressures ranged from 44% across BCUs spanning India and Sri Lanka (BCUID 49) to 92% in French Polynesia (BCUID 3). Land-based marine impacts generally contributed the least to overall CHI; the percent contribution ranged from 0% (BCUIDs = 1, 6, and 7 in Australia) to 21% FIGURE 2 Proportion of cumulative impact from climate, land, and marine pressures in each (a) bioclimatic unit and (b) across bioclimatic units in each country (pink, impacts driven predominantly by climate; blue, impacts driven predominantly by marine pressures; and green, impacts driven predominantly by land pressures). Country abbreviation definitions and bioclimatic unit identifiers are in Table 1 (BCUID = 39 spanning Kenya and Somalia) (mean = 6.8% [5]). The percentage of marine-based impacts was slightly higher, ranging from 4.2% (BCUID = 3 in French Polynesia) to 45.4% (BCUID = 18 spanning Malaysia and the Philippines) (mean = 24.3% [10.5]).
From 2008 to 2013, overall CHI increased in 90% (n = 45) of BCUs (Appendix S8). Climate impacts had both the greatest number of BCUs that experienced an increase in impact (94%) and the largest increase in intensity (

Country-level results
The BCUs we considered occurred across 28 countries. Nearly one-third (28%) of countries contained one BCU, whereas Australia and Indonesia contained 6 and 14 BCUs, respectively (Table 1). Total CHI across countries containing BCUs ranged from 2.47 in Somalia to 7.99 in Singapore (mean [SD] = 3.9 [1.18]) (Appendix S10). The relative contribution of climate, land, and marine impacts to CHI remained relatively the same as in BCUs on average (65%, 9.4%, and 25.6%, respectively) (Figure 2b). Singapore had the lowest percentage of CHI attributed to climate change (25%), and French Polynesia had the highest (89%). Conversely, Singapore had the highest proportion of marine CHI (56%), and the Solomon Islands had the lowest (6.7%). Australia had the lowest proportion of land impacts (0.01%) across BCUs, and Kenya had the highest at 20.6%.
Comparing relative marine-and land-based impacts reveals that Djibouti, Haiti, Kenya, Somalia, and Timor-Leste had relatively higher land-based impacts than marine impacts across climate-resilient BCUs, whereas Brazil, Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Sudan generally had higher marine than land-based impacts (Figure 3b). Nine countries (Bangladesh, Dominican Republic, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Tanzania, and Yemen) had relatively high impacts from both land-and marine-based impacts.

Management index
We calculated three management indices to estimate the potential intent and commitment of each country to combat each impact category. Higher values indicated a higher potential to manage impacts for each category, whereas lower values indicated a lower potential. Fiji (0.64), Bangladesh (0.62), and Solomon Islands (0.57) had the highest climate management index, whereas Kenya (0.2), Sudan (0.19), and Yemen (0.12) had the lowest (Appendix S11). For the marine index, Tanzania (0.67), Indonesia (0.64), and Australia (0.63) had the highest index, and Djibouti (0.004), Myanmar (0.09), and Saudi Arabia (0.12) had the lowest (Appendix S11). Finally, for the land index, Sri Lanka (0.7), Australia (0.62), and Indonesia (0.62) scored highest, and Solomon Islands (0.07), Timor-Leste (0.06), and French Polynesia (0) scored lowest (Appendix S11). The land and marine management indices were significantly positively correlated (R 2 = 0.53, p = 0.004).
The higher the climate management index in a country, the greater the mean climate impact (R 2 = 0.43, p = 0.02) (Figure 5a). The relationship between the marine and land indices and their average pressures were not significant (R 2 = 0.007, p = 0.97 and R 2 = 0.17, p = 0.39, respectively) (Figures 5b &  c). Singapore was an outlier for both marine and land impacts, and Fiji and Bangladesh were outliers for the climate index (Appendix S12). When outliers were removed, the relationship between climate pressures and the management index was no longer significant (R 2 = 0.15, p = 0.46), but overall results for land and marine remained the same (R 2 = 0.3, p = 0.13 for land and R 2 = 0.15, p = 0.45 for marine).
Australia, Brazil, Malaysia, Philippines, French Polynesia, Sudan, and Timor-Leste had relatively high (≥median) FIGURE 4 Change in cumulative impact (2008)(2009)(2010)(2011)(2012)(2013) in relation to cumulative impact in 2013 from climate, marine, and land impacts across 50 climate-resilient bioclimatic units (a, b, and c, respectively) and countries containing bioclimatic units (d, e, and f, respectively) (dashed vertical line, median cumulative impact; solid horizontal line, 0 change in cumulative impact; points to the left of the vertical line, areas with relatively low impact; points to the right of the vertical line, areas with relatively high impact; points below the horizontal line, decreasing impacts; and points above the horizontal line, increasing impacts from 2008 to 2013). Country abbreviations are defined and bioclimatic unit identifiers are in Table 1 climate pressures but low (<median) climate management indices, whereas Bangladesh, Egypt, Fiji, Haiti, India, Papua New Guinea, and Solomon Islands had relatively high impacts and high climate indices. Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Eritrea, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Singapore had low climate impacts and high climate indices (Figure 5a).
In the marine realm, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Egypt, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Philippines, Sudan, and Tanzania had relatively high marine impacts but high marine management indices. Australia, Cuba, Fiji, Kenya, and French Polynesia had relatively low impacts and high marine management indices. Bahamas, Djibouti, Eritrea, Haiti, Papua New Guinea, Saudi Arabia, Solomon Islands, Somalia, and Timor-Leste had relatively low marine impacts and management indices (Figure 5b). Finally, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Singapore, and Yemen had high impacts but low marine management indices.
On land, six countries (Djibouti, Myanmar, Singapore, Somalia, Timor-Leste, and Yemen) had relatively high land impacts, but low land management indices. Eight countries (Bangladesh, Dominican Republic, Haiti, India, Kenya, Sri Lanka, Philippines, and Tanzania) had relatively high impacts and high land management indices, and six countries (Australia, Bahamas, Brazil, Cuba, Indonesia, and Malaysia) had relatively low impacts but high management indices (Figure 5c). Countries not listed for each realm had low impacts and low management indices.
There was no significant relationship between average change in impacts and the management index for any of the categories (climate: R 2 = 0.20, p = 0.30, marine: R 2 = −0.14, p = 0.48, and land: R 2 = 0.07, p = 0.72). There were seven countries with high change in impacts and a low management index for climate, nine for marine, and seven for land. Conversely, there were seven countries with high change in impacts and a high management index for climate, five for marine, and seven for land (Figures 5d-f).

DISCUSSION
We quantified cumulative impacts from climate-, land-, and marine-based pressures across coral reef BCUs that have been identified as being relatively less exposed to climate change (thermal stress and cyclones) and more likely to repopulate reefs in the future . Additionally, we calculated these threats across BCUs in countries tasked with their management. We linked impacts with policies and management actions to identify a countries' potential commitment to manage impacts and to help prioritize conservation investments. We found varying contributions from climate-, marine-, and land-based pressures across BCUs and countries. Our approach improves understanding and eases identification of  Table 1 for corresponding country names the main source of pressures in BCUs and can be used to document and determine gaps in management measures for specific sources of pressure. When coupled with fine-scale analysis and ongoing conservation efforts, this approach can help to ensure that BCUs have the best chance of survival.

Continued need to manage and adapt to climate pressures
Our results highlight the continued need to manage climate pressures at the global scale to secure these areas in the future, as well as the need for a stronger focus on climate adaptation in ecosystems and associated coastal communities. Climate pressures contributed the most to CHI across all BCUs. Although the portfolio of BCUs in our analysis was identified as being relatively less exposed to climate change impacts, tolerance is not synonymous with immunity and there are still many uncertainties surrounding climate impacts, tipping points, and biosphere boundaries (Lenton et al., 2019). Further, these BCUs were identified using data on thermal stress and extreme weather events . The climate data we used included different climate pressures (sea surface temperature anomalies, UV radiation anomalies, ocean acidification, and sea-level rise) that may pose additional risks to these areas. Global action to reduce carbon emissions is still of utmost importance to secure a long-term future for BCUs and coral reefs globally.
Countries with higher mean climate impacts had higher climate management indices. This suggests that countries experiencing greater impacts of climate change are also those showing the most commitment to tackling it. This trend may, in part, be due to the metrics included in our climate management index and differences in the climate change rhetoric among countries. For example, many organizations that promote and fund EbA projects focus largely on development and adaptation in countries with high climate impacts and low capacity (Doswald et al., 2014;Giffin et al., 2020). Many countries with higher capacity may either continue with traditional marine and land management through a climate change lens without referencing the EbA typology or use more expensive hard infrastructure adaptation solutions (e.g., seawalls) Jones et al., 2012). Finally, many countries with strong climate commitments also rely on substantial external funding, so actual achievement of their targets and commitments may be more uncertain. It appears that a few countries are driving this trend, specifically high levels of climate change management commitment in Fiji and Bangladesh, because this relationship was no longer significant when these countries were removed from the analysis.
Ensuring positive action results from EbA and climate policies (e.g., nationally determined contributions) will be necessary to ensure change, but the commitment of countries experiencing climate change impacts in tackling these threats is promising. Climate change is a global problem and greater investment and collective action from countries not just experiencing climate impacts but contributing most to climate change is needed to alleviate climate pressures across coral reefs globally (Wolff et al., 2015). Further, coral reef resilience to climate impacts could be enhanced by reducing other locally manageable marine and land stressors (Anthony et al., 2015;Brown et al., 2013;Delevaux et al., 2018) or through innovative, yet controversial approaches, such as creating more stress-tolerant coral assemblages (van Oppen et al., 2015).

Reducing localized pressures on land and sea
The BCUs and countries with dominant land or marine-based impacts (upper left and lower right quadrant Figure 3) can achieve the greatest reductions in CHI by focusing efforts on these respective realms. The areas with both high land and marine impacts will require a much more integrated approach to reduce threats across realms. These areas may be particularly at risk due to exposure to multiple sources of impacts, such as potential synergistic interactions among fishing, land-based runoff, and climate change pressures. Further, 24 BCUs exhibited relatively high CHI in 2013 and increases in CHI since 2008 (Appendices S8 & S9). These BCUs may be areas in need of urgent conservation action. For example, of these BCUs, 19 had increases in locally manageable land or marine impacts that could potentially be mitigated. Exploring BCUs and countries that have relatively low impacts or relatively small increases in impacts may reveal effective policies, practices, and opportunities to learn. However, there was no significant relationship between marine and land impacts or changes in impacts and their management indices.
The lack of significance between marine and land management indices and pressures could be the result of a lack of commitment or opportunity for countries with high impacts to implement management policies and measures; ineffective conservation actions at reducing these pressures; inadequate or missing components in deriving our management indices; or all three. In the first case, countries with high pressures and low management indices across impact categories (Figure 5) may indicate a need to further develop adaptation and management strategies across these realms. However, it is likely that marine and land management metrics do not adequately reflect outcomes, and compared with our climate management index, the marine and land management metrics lacked measures of concrete change in the drivers of pressures (e.g., change in GHG emissions) due to data gaps or unavailability.

Prioritizing conservation actions
We found heterogeneous contributions of land and marine impacts across BCUs and countries, which can help guide management decisions. In areas with a high proportion of landbased impacts, reducing land-based run-off from agriculture and waste management (e.g., pesticides, inorganic pollution, and fertilizer pollution [Anthony et al., 2015;Brown et al., 2013]) and improved planning for development projects to reduce impacts (i.e., avoid, minimize, restore, and offset mitigation hierarchy [Arlidge et al., 2018;Kiesecker et al., 2010]) will be necessary to provide the best conservation benefits. Kenya is one such example from our analysis, where land impacts are high. Encouragingly, Kenya already has several ICM strategies in place (two multinational, four national, and one subnational). Explicitly incorporating subnational policies and targeting these efforts to consider climate tolerant reefs would help reduce overall impacts and perhaps increase reef resilience to other stressors (Anthony et al., 2015;Brown et al., 2013).
In the case of marine impacts, climate-tolerant BCUs in Singapore had the highest proportion of marine-based impacts across all countries. Exploring the data further revealed high average stressor intensity across four marine stressors: ocean pollution, invasive species, shipping, and night lights, with relatively high habitat vulnerability to invasive species. Given the link between shipping and invasive species (Lim & Tan, 2018), stricter national policies that reduce the introduction of species through ballast water could help reduce these threats (e.g., prioritizing high-risk vessels and high-risk nonindigenous marine species [Lim et al., 2017]), but currently they do not exist. Finescale analyses and exploring how nuances in individual pressures and habitat vulnerability scores drive cumulative impact scores can provide more concrete policy recommendations to manage specific threats and should be explored further.

Comparing BCU and country-level results
Examining BCUs at the individual and country levels can help prioritize actions across these relatively large BCU areas (500 km 2 ) and inform interventions across different levels (e.g., national level policy vs. on-the-ground action in BCUs). For example, in Kenya and Somalia, land-based impacts are greater than marine-based impacts across the country, suggesting that best-practice land-use policies (e.g., ICM and ridgeto-reef planning) should be implemented at the national level. However, both countries included two BCUs, and at the BCU level, one BCU had higher marine impacts and one had higher land impacts, suggesting potentially vastly different management approaches in each BCU.
Notably, BCUs with higher marine impacts were shared across multiple countries (BCUID 14 across Kenya and Tanzania and BCUID 21 across Somalia, Eritrea, and Djibouti). This trend was also seen in Singapore, which had one identified BCU that also spanned parts of Indonesia and Malaysia (BCUID = 13). The BCU had a CHI of 3.45, but the portion in Singapore's borders had much higher average impacts (CHI = 7.99), driven by high levels of marine-based impacts.
These nuances are important to consider, and finer-scale analyses should be conducted in the future to uncover further patterns and dominant pressures driving these trends.

Limitations and future directions
Although we aimed to use the best global data available to assess cumulative impacts and management potential, several caveats are important to consider. First, indices provide quick measures and benchmarks of the state of conservation actions between areas and through time but are notoriously challenging to construct. It is challenging to find causality between pressures and conservation actions through indices (Moriarty et al., 2018). However, we believe that our indices provide useful information for comparisons among countries, and their individual components provide a better understanding of the state of management actions and policies across climate, marine, and land impacts. Our management indices serve as a proxy for the potential to manage impacts from each pressure category but do not measure effectiveness of these management measures. Determining whether lower impacts are the result of the absence of pressures or the adequate use of policy and management practices to limit these pressures could help implement effective sustainability measures in other areas. Future work should undertake conservation impact and counterfactual analyses of policies and conservation actions at local scales to better understand the degree to which they influence cumulative pressures to help improve these indices.
Second, there are likely important pressures and management metrics we did not consider that may vary by country and BCU. Tourism, mining, and wastewater, for example, are likely to affect several of these BCUs (Burke et al., 2011) but were not accounted for in our analysis due to a lack of global data on these pressures. Seven of the 19 pressures were not accounted for in the change in CHI analyses, as in Halpern et al. (2015), which likely led to underestimates of change. We assumed an equal contribution of each pressure to CHI and included all pressures and habitat types (not only coral reefs) used in Halpern et al. (2015). We included all pressures because of a lack of understanding of how pressures may potentially interact and their relative importance across areas. We included all habitat types due to the large size of BCUs that contained other marine habitats outside of coral reefs, intrinsic linkages between marine habitats, and the need for ecosystem-based management. We recognize that several pressures may have weaker links to coral reef systems (e.g., pelagic bycatch [Appendices S1 & S13]) and that pressure-specific weightings or a focus solely on coral reefs would affect our results (Moriarty et al., 2018). Similarly, our management indices may be missing key metrics that we were unable to include due to data gaps or data unavailability. Some of our metrics may have variability within countries that may lead to over or underestimation. For example, our marine management index had a strong focus on fisheries management, and we did not include ICM plans with multipurpose objectives for climate change adaptation, which may underestimate land-based marine pressures in countries that combine these goals. Similarly, other effective conservation measures, management effectiveness, and community involvement/support likely play large roles in conservation outcomes, but data were either unavailable or did not provide appropriate coverage across our countries of interest (Appendix S5).
Finally, our analysis uncovered broad-scale patterns in each region and BCU, but additional fine-scale analysis should be undertaken to ensure the most effective management decisions are made. In doing so, additional aspects of climate vulnerability could be explored, such as adaptive capacity and sensitivity Hughes et al., 2012), and localized habitat vulnerability and pressure scores could be used to further refine cumulative impact assessments.
Careful monitoring and management of coral reefs that are least exposed to climate change is essential for ensuring the greatest chances of their survival and ability to repopulate other areas. Exploring the contribution of climate, land, and marine pressures to CHIs helps prioritize conservation and management efforts to reduce the most prominent local pressures to these BCUs, thereby reducing the overall human impact and increasing resilience. Country-level patterns can be used to guide national policies, and nuances in individual BCUs are important for guiding local management decisions. Our management indices revealed areas where management components can be improved. Increased commitment to climate change policy, fine-scale analyses to further inform onthe-ground decision-making, and additional consideration of potential synergies and trade-offs among pressures and overall conservation outcomes are urgently required to protect these invaluable ecosystems.