scholarly journals A global network of marine protected areas for food

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (45) ◽  
pp. 28134-28139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reniel B. Cabral ◽  
Darcy Bradley ◽  
Juan Mayorga ◽  
Whitney Goodell ◽  
Alan M. Friedlander ◽  
...  

Marine protected areas (MPAs) are conservation tools that are increasingly implemented, with growing national commitments for MPA expansion. Perhaps the greatest challenge to expanded use of MPAs is the perceived trade-off between protection and food production. Since MPAs can benefit both conservation and fisheries in areas experiencing overfishing and since overfishing is common in many coastal nations, we ask how MPAs can be designed specifically to improve fisheries yields. We assembled distribution, life history, and fisheries exploitation data for 1,338 commercially important stocks to derive an optimized network of MPAs globally. We show that strategically expanding the existing global MPA network to protect an additional 5% of the ocean could increase future catch by at least 20% via spillover, generating 9 to 12 million metric tons more food annually than in a business-as-usual world with no additional protection. Our results demonstrate how food provisioning can be a central driver of MPA design, offering a pathway to strategically conserve ocean areas while securing seafood for the future.

2015 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 47-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard N. Muallil ◽  
Melchor R. Deocadez ◽  
Renmar Jun S. Martinez ◽  
Samuel S. Mamauag ◽  
Cleto L. Nañola ◽  
...  

Data in Brief ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 104176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard N. Muallil ◽  
Melchor R. Deocadez ◽  
Renmar Jun S. Martinez ◽  
Porfirio M. Aliño

2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (10) ◽  
pp. 1761-1777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas M. Garrison ◽  
Owen S. Hamel ◽  
André E. Punt

One of the argued research-related benefits of marine protected areas (MPAs) to fisheries management is that because there is no fishing inside of an MPA, it may be possible to precisely estimate the rate of natural mortality and better determine growth and maturity rates, parameters that are often prespecified in stock assessments. This study assesses the degree to which having an MPA increases the ability to estimate these parameters in a integrated stock assessment model, Stock Synthesis; how long it would take for these benefits to be reflected in improved estimates of management quantities; and the extent to which these improvements will be reduced or lost if there is movement of adults (i.e., spillover) from the MPA to the fished area. A two-area, age- and length-structured simulation model is used to examine these benefits on estimation performance for Stock Synthesis. Given the data and process assumptions explored here, the extent of improvement in estimation of growth and maturity parameters with data collected from MPAs is small, but estimation of natural mortality is substantially improved compared with directly estimating these parameters using fishery data. The extent of this improvement depends on the degree of spillover and the complexity of the assessment model.


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