scholarly journals Moving from MPAs to Area-based Management Measures in the South China Sea

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-231
Author(s):  
Youna Lyons ◽  
Robert Beckman ◽  
Loke Ming Choub ◽  
Danwei Huang

Abstract Evolution of the marine protected area discourse into an area-based management tool may provide an avenue for a more progressive approach to protection of the Spratly seamounts. A first step could be the recognition of the Spratlys as an ecologically or biologically significant area (EBSA) under the Convention on Biological Diversity. This purely scientific recognition exercise would be without prejudice to the sovereignty, sovereign rights and jurisdiction of coastal States or State claiming sovereignty over the islands. Furthermore, it is up to the States concerned to later agree on specific restriction on activities in these areas as deemed necessary. This article shows that there are sufficient published data to justify that the Spratly seamounts meet the scientific criteria of an EBSA. However, it also proposes areas that may be prioritised on the basis of distinctive species composition of reef-building corals in the South China Sea.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei‐Chuan Chiang ◽  
Shian-Jhong Lin ◽  
Ker-Yea Soong ◽  
Te-Yu Liao ◽  
Yu-Yun Chen ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper presents the first application of pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) to giant trevally (Caranx ignobilis) in a "no-take" marine protected area (MPA) comprising in a major reef system in the South China Sea (Dongsha Attol National Park). In order to determine appropriate management strategies in an around the MPA and to delimit stock boundaries to help restore populations, fundamental ecological information is required on movement patterns, habitat preferences and home range. In total 10 giant trevally were tagged from May 2016 to September 2018. Eight tags reported and remained affixed from 17 to 243 days and linear displacements ranged from 26 to 826 km from deployment to pop-up locations. Fish were mainly confined to the mixed-layer but occasionally made deeper descents (~50 -60 m) during nighttime and the distributions of time spent at depth (~0 - 67 m) and temperature (21.5 - 35.4°C) were significantly different between daytime and nighttime but the transitions were not pronounced. Most probable tracks calculated from a state-space Kalman filter suggested site-fidelity and/or cyclic N-S dispersal patterns possibly related to spawning or foraging as about half of the pop-up locations were within ~100 km of the tagging location. Given these findings and implications, it is possible that giant trevally may need to be managed at small spatial scales to preserve genetic diversity. Additional tagging studies, however, using genetic data and conventional tags to maximize cost-benefit and augmented with a sub-set of PSATs, will be required to test this hypothesis at a higher level of statistical power.


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