4.6 Article

Commercial fisheries closures in marine protected areas on Canada's Pacific coast: The exception, not the rule

Journal

MARINE POLICY
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 309-316

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2010.10.010

Keywords

Marine protected area; Commercial fisheries; Integrated management; International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN); Canada's Pacific coast; Spatial analysis

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No-take marine protected areas (MPAs), where all fishing is prohibited, have been shown to provide benefits that include greater productivity of fish stocks due to increased densities, average sizes, and reproductive output. A critical component of this success is the effective management of MPAs to ensure that only those activities deemed permissible, are allowed to occur. As of 2008, 161 MPAs had been designated on the Pacific coast of Canada by federal, provincial or municipal authorities. The objective of this study was to discover how many of these MPAs are intended to provide full protection to habitats and species from commercial fishing and whether management measures were put in place to actualize this conservation intent. The comprehensive spatial dataset was built illustrating commercial fisheries closures and this was overlaid with MPA locations in a GIS. The majority of MPAs were designated as IUCN Strict Nature Reserve (Type la), Wilderness Area (Type Ib), and National Park (Type II) marine reserves, which are intended to be free from exploitation. It was found that 160 of the 161 MPAs are open to some commercial harvesting within their bounds. One small municipal MPA and portions of three other MPAs are not open to commercial harvesting. The incongruence between management intent and fisheries permitted suggests a management failure between designation of MPAs and implementation of fisheries management regulations. Recommendations include better coordination between the management of fisheries and the management of protected areas in Canada's Pacific Waters. This analysis and these recommendations are timely as Canada has made an international commitment as a signatory to the Convention on Biological Diversity to build a network of MPAs by 2012, in which at least 10% of each ecological region will be effectively conserved. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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