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December 12, 2024

Conservation leads to benefits: Large marine protected areas are boosting fish catch rates

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Increases in catch rates for fish such as tuna have been demonstrated near recently created Large-Scale Marine Protected Areas (LSMPAs), including Revillagigedo in Mexico. This shows that LSPMAs are large enough to protect highly migratory species such as tuna, especially bigeye tuna. Those are the findings of two research scientists, including an economics professor at the University of Hawaiハサi at Mト]oa, who analyzed publicly available data. The findings were in Science on December 12.

"In 2004, there was only one Large-Scale MPA in the world, the Galテ。pagos Marine Reserve in Ecuador. Today there are more than 20, including Papahト]aumokuト〔ea in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands. Most of these protected areas are in waters where tuna fisheries operate," said lead author John Lynham, a professor in the Department of Economics at UH Mト]oa's College of Social Sciences.

"This means that we can now test, for the first time, the impact of these marine protected areas, especially on tuna species like ハサahi and skipjack, which support a global industry worth over $40 billion."

Understanding the interactions between LSMPAs, tuna stocks and tuna fisheries is timely given international goals to protect 30% of the world's ocean area by 2030 and the United Nations' Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Agreement, an aimed at protecting biodiversity on the high seas.

Lynham and report co-author Juan Carlos Villaseテアor-Derbez, a professor at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, reviewed data from nine LSMPAs across the Pacific and Indian oceans.

"We found that the spillover benefits, measured as the change in catch rates, are strongest just outside the boundaries of these MPAs and get stronger over time," said Villaseテアor-Derbez. "The effects were strongest for the MPAs that were heavily fished prior to protection and are now well-enforced."

"While protected areas in Hawaiハサi were not the main focus of this paper, our research also reveals that the Papahト]aumokuト〔ea Marine National Monument, the world's largest no-fishing zone, has caused a 10% increase in (ハサahi) catch rates near the monument, in line with a recent finding of a 13% increase by researchers from the University of Washington and the Western Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Council," said Lynham.

"A unique aspect of this research is that we built a global database on tuna catch using only publicly available data," said Villaseテアor-Derbez. "Anyone in the world can download the same dataset we used and replicate our analysis. That hasn't been possible with previous studies on large-scale MPA impacts."

More information: John Lynham et al, Evidence of spillover benefits from large-scale marine protected areas to purse seine fisheries, Science (2024).

Journal information: Science

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