Long-distance benefits of marine reserves: myth or reality?
Summary
Marine dispersal distance estimates are limited by the spatial scale of sampling design and therefore biased downwards. Active larval behavior, oceanographic eddies and fronts, tsunamis, marine debris, and translocations are potentially important, but overlooked, dispersal vectors over long distances. The largest marine reserves have the highest potential for massive and long-distance benefits but are the most isolated reserves. Long-distance dispersal has important consequences for the design of marine reserve networks.