| Literature DB >> 29668750 |
Tammy E Davies1, Graham Epstein2, Stacy E Aguilera3, Cassandra M Brooks4, Michael Cox5, Louisa S Evans6,7, Sara M Maxwell8, Mateja Nenadovic9, Natalie C Ban1.
Abstract
Large marine protected areas (LMPAs) are increasingly being established and have a high profile in marine conservation. LMPAs are expected to achieve multiple objectives, and because of their size are postulated to avoid trade-offs that are common in smaller MPAs. However, evaluations across multiple outcomes are lacking. We used a systematic approach to code several social and ecological outcomes of 12 LMPAs. We found evidence of three types of trade-offs: trade-offs between different ecological resources (supply trade-offs); trade-offs between ecological resource conditions and the well-being of resource users (supply-demand trade-offs); and trade-offs between the well-being outcomes of different resource users (demand trade-offs). We also found several divergent outcomes that were attributed to influences beyond the scope of the LMPA. We suggest that despite their size, trade-offs can develop in LMPAs and should be considered in planning and design. LMPAs may improve their performance across multiple social and ecological objectives if integrated with larger-scale conservation efforts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29668750 PMCID: PMC5905982 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The three main components of the social-ecological system and the five outcomes measured in this study.
| Outcome | Social-ecological system component | Definition | Possible values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ecosystem health | Resource (ecological system) | What is the change in ecosystem health over the time frame assessed? | Increasing; stayed the same/mixed effects; decreasing |
| Fishery | Resource (ecological system) | What is the change in the fishery over the time frame assessed? | Increasing; stayed the same/mixed effects; decreasing |
| Migratory species | Resource (ecological system) | What is the change in the migratory species over the time frame assessed? | Increasing; stayed the same/mixed effects; decreasing |
| Well-being of user related to ecosystem resource | Resource user | What is the change in the well-being of the user associated with the ecosystem health resource over the time frame assessed? | Increasing; stayed the same/mixed effects; decreasing; NA (no user) |
| Well-being of user related to fishery | Resource user | What is the change in the well-being of the user associated with the fishery resource over the time frame assessed? | Increasing; stayed the same/mixed effects; decreasing; NA (no user) |
Details on the components coded for each large marine protected area.
| MPA Name | Fisheries Interaction | Ecosystem Health Interaction | Migratory Species Interaction | Time period assessed (snapshot) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fishery | User group | Indicator | User group | Migratory Species | ||
| Cenderawasih Bay National Park | Reef fish | Artisanal fisher | Coral cover | Artisanal fisher | Green turtle | 2002–2015 |
| Central California National Marine Sanctuary | Groundfish habitat | Commercial fisher | Rocky intertidal | Researchers | Humpback whale | 1992–2015 |
| Galapagos Marine Reserve | Brown sea cucumber | Artisanal fisher | Sharks | Tourism | Green turtle | 1998–2015 |
| Great Australian Bight Marine Park | Southern Bluefin tuna | Commercial fisher | Australian Sealion | Commercial fisher | Southern right whale | 2000–2012 |
| Great Barrier Reef Marine Park | Reef fish | Commercial fisher | Coral cover | Commercial fisher | Green turtle | 2005–2015 |
| Heard Island and McDonald Island | Patagonian toothfish | Commercial fisher | King penguin | NA | Light mantled albatross | 2002–2012 |
| Macquarie Marine Reserve | Patagonian toothfish | Commercial fisher | King penguin | NA | Light mantled albatross | 2001–2015 |
| Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument | Lobster | NA | Trophic density | NA | Green turtle | 2006–2015 |
| Raja Ampat Marine Protected Area Network | Reef fish | Artisanal fisher | Coral cover | Artisanal fisher | Green turtle | 2009–2015 |
| Seaflower Marine Protected Area | Groupers (6 species) | Artisanal fisher | Coral cover | Artisanal fisher | Green turtle | 2005–2015 |
| Svalbard Eastern Nature Reserves | Shrimp | Commercial fisher | Polar bear | Tourism | Black-legged kittiwake | 2002–2012 |
| Wakatobi Marine Park | Reef fish | Artisanal fisher | Coral cover | Artisanal fisher | Green turtle | 2008–2015 |
Fig 1Visual representations of how the three conceptual trade-offs (as identified by Mouchet et al. (23)) may appear across the seven outcomes assessed in our study.
Each example radar plot (A,B,C) shows all five focal outcomes (ecosystem health, migratory species, fishery resources, well-being of user groups (e.g., fishers), and well-being of users of the ecosystem (e.g., coastal residents, tourists), with the inner-most band representing a decline and the outside line representing an increase (indicated with ‘worst’ to ‘best’ on the radar plot). Key outcome trade-offs have been circled to aid understanding of the trade-off typology and how it applies to our data. Outcome abbreviations used in radar plot: Eco = ecosystem health change; WB_Eco = well-being change of the user of the ecosystem health indicator; WB_Fish = well-being change of the user of the fisheries indicator; Mig = migratory species change; Fish = fisheries change. A: Supply trade-off: ecosystem health improving, but fisheries declining (or vice versa; conservation versus use). B: Supply-demand trade-off: fisheries improving, but well-being of a user (fisher) declining (or vice versa). C: Demand trade-off: differentiated impacts in the well-being of different users, with a well-being decline of a user dependent on fisheries, and a well-being improvement of a user dependent on ecosystem health (e.g. tourism) (or vice versa).
Mechanisms that may give rise to trade-offs, including description and examples from the literature.
| Trade-off Mechanisms | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Management priorities | Management decisions prioritize certain objectives, and invest more in associated activities. Applies to supply, supply-demand, and demand trade-offs. | MPAs commonly prioritize management that benefits ecosystems, resulting in the ‘classic’ conservation trade-off between protection or use of resources (e.g., [ |
| Everyday resource use decisions | Trade-offs arise between extraction and short-term well-being or resource conditions and long-term sustainability. Applies to supply-demand trade-offs. | Overfishing is associated with increases in (short-term) well-being at the expense of resource conditions [ |
| Externality of resource use | Some trade-offs occur as an unintended consequence of resource use where the exploitation of one resource has impacts on others. Applies to supply trade-offs. | Some fishing gears cause destruction or alteration of habitats that other natural resources depend on. Similarly, fishing can have incidental mortality of non-target species that are targeted in a different fishery (e.g., [ |
| Biophysical relationships | Conditions of one environmental good or service are dependent on the conditions of other environmental goods or services. Applies to supply trade-offs. | Trophic cascades can occur as a response to protection [ |
Fig 2Radar plots of all outcomes for each case study.
Inner line is declining status, middle line is same or mixed effects, and outer line is increasing status. Missing data (either where there was no user so an outcome was not appropriate, or no data present) were not plotted as points on the radar chart and the lines connect the points where data were present. Outcome abbreviations used in radar plot: Eco = ecosystem health change; WBEco = well-being change of the user of the ecosystem health indicator; WBFish = well-being change of the user of the fisheries indicator; Migratory = migratory species change; Fish = fisheries change.