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What's That?

Marine Resources

Ensuring the Future Through Preservation
Story by Alex Brylske

Imagine if there was an open hunting season on virtually every animal, gerbils to grizzly bears, bunnies to buffalo. Now imagine that you could pursue your prize just about anywhere, including in a national park. The scenario is almost too ludicrous to comprehend. Yet it is very close to the situation we have throughout three-quarters of our planet, the sea.

If you take a look at a detailed map of North America, particularly in the western regions, you'll notice a significant portion is set aside as some form of, protected area, (park, monument, wilderness area, reserve, etc.). In no instance are hunting regulations so lax that anything approaching the scenario above is possible. In fact, the prohibition of hunting in most of these protected areas is in no way surprising.

Our conservation ethic and traditions are rightfully a source of pride. The problem is that our awareness, and in many cases even our desire to preserve, stops at the shoreline. A very telling global statistic is that to date less than 1 percent of the ocean receives even basic protection from human activity, while more than 10 times this area is set aside on land. Sadly, this continues to be the case even after every informed and rational person on Earth understands that, contrary to our past assumptions, the sea is not inexhaustible. One researcher has termed the lax attitude toward ocean protection a result of, fish bigotry., Dr. Carl Safina, in his wonderful book, Song for a Blue Ocean, calls it the lack of a, sea ethic.,

What a Marine Reserve Is, and What It's Not

A consensus is growing among scientists and the marine conservation community that one of the most important measures we can take to conserve the sea's precious resources is to set aside areas from any consumptive or extractive activity. Just how much should be set aside is uncertain, and often debated, but experts agree that probably somewhere between 10 and 20 percent of the world ocean should consist of no-take marine reserves. Frankly, my own reaction to the need for no-take marine reserves is a resounding, Duh!, After all, how can you expect to replenish marine resources if there's no sanctuary for healthy breeding populations? Yet not all agree that this is a self-evident or necessary step.

Given all the attention paid to marine parks and sanctuaries in recent years, you may foster the mistaken belief that at least the 1 percent that's set aside is safe from exploitation. Sadly, this isn't the case, not even in developed countries that can afford to do so. One example is the United States' National Marine Sanctuaries. Unlike our National Parks, which are operated under the U.S. Department of Interior and charged primarily with the mission of preservation, the National Marine Sanctuary (NMS) Program is administered under the Department of Commerce (commerce, as in making money). In contrast to the preservation priority of the National Parks Service, the NMS Program holds a mandate for, multiple compatible use., This means that while conservation is an important goal, it must be balanced with commercial activities such as fishing. This is not to imply that the NMS Program isn't committed to marine reserves. In fact, much of the largest no-take reserve in the United States, near the Dry Tortugas, will be within the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. (See the sidebar for an update on the Tortugas 2000 initiative.) But indicative of the dire need for rethinking our priorities, even this largest of all no-take reserves will comprise a mere 185 square nautical miles.

A similar example of the deceptive nature of the term, marine reserve, exists in California. Considering that California has over 100 refuges, sanctuaries and protected areas, one might easily conclude that its marine resources are under a high level of protection. But in fact, only nine of these areas are off-limits to extractive activities such as fishing. In terms of area, this means that of the 3.6 million acres of protected coastal waters, only 6,000, that's less than two-tenths of 1 percent, are protected from the nets, lines and spears of recreational and commercial fishers. Some contend that there would be less confusion (or deception) if the term no-take marine reserve was replaced by one proposed by the American Fisheries Society, marine wilderness areas.,

Another interesting aspect of the marine reserve discussions is that it's often assumed that this cutting-edge management strategy is a new concept. The reality is just another example of how little we know about our past. For centuries, peoples of the South Pacific have recognized the importance of comprehensive, integrated coastal management. While none of them held a Ph.D., they did recognize the consequence their actions would have on their children and grandchildren.

In fact, the people of Hawaii had a term for it, ahupua'a. Recognizing that true coastal zone management must include the entire watershed, caretakers, called konohiki, managed a section of land from the mountains to the sea. This conservation system prevented exploitation, pollution and extinction of plants, animals and marine species, while allowing the people to take what they needed. Unlike the often ludicrous fines imposed upon present-day law-breakers, violation of the ahupua'a was punishable by death! Clearly, we have much to learn from some ancient cultures in managing today's marine resources.

What Marine Reserves Do

Most of the attention on marine reserves has focused on their role in fisheries management. Indeed, there's now clear evidence that no-take reserves do work in protecting populations of target species. The most recent example, as you may have read recently in the press, is the significant recovery of the Massachusetts' scallop industry. After only a few years' closure, fishers in the Cape Cod region are reporting record harvests. But there's much more to support the establishment of reserves than their role as fish factories.

In 1995 a workshop sponsored by the Center for Marine Conservation and the Caribbean Marine Research Center drew together 25 of the world's leading experts on marine reserves to review the global results. The group determined 69 benefits of marine reserves and broke them into four broad categories.

The first category was the protection of ecosystem structure, function and integrity, which is the basis for biodiversity. The second involved improved fisheries yields, which, to me, is the no-brainer part of the marine reserves equation. The third category involved how marine reserves can help further knowledge and understanding of marine systems. Again, common sense tells us that to understand an ecosystem, we must be able to study it in its least altered state.

Fourth, and most pertinent to us in the diving community, the group concluded that marine reserves provide enhanced nonconsumptive opportunities, such as tourism. Even many of those who were once skeptical now understand the long-term, sustainable benefit of keeping nature natural. This, of course, is old news to many divers, who have for the past 20 years lived the ethic of,take only pictures, leave only bubbles.,

The Opposing Side

If you're a diver, you're probably thinking,,OK, so what's the problem? Let's establish more no-take reserves., The problem is that not everyone agrees. Opponents to reserves, primarily commercial and recreational fishing interests, cite many pseudoscientific reasons to oppose them or slow their establishment. Many opponents counter the reserve argument by insisting that there just isn't enough scientific proof that they work; no one is certain of their success. This is an easy cop-out, because waiting for complete,certainty, as in all areas of science, means waiting until the cows come home. Yet when faced with substantial evidence and overwhelming scientific consensus, detractors retort,,They may work elsewhere, but not here, or contend that the resource isn't really in trouble, it's just a,natural cycle.,

Of course, there's the reliable old saw that fishing is already too heavily regulated or that loss of fishing grounds is simply not viable economically. (One should also keep in mind that globally, commercial fishing is an industry that annually spends about $125 billion to catch about $75 billion worth of fish. Go figure.)

In reality, what research on ecosystems is telling us is that we may never fully understand the intricacies of how a natural system works. But this is not an excuse to do nothing. In fact, it's a powerful rationale to ensure that portions of ecosystems remain in as pristine a condition as possible. As the environmentalist Aldo Leopold told us long ago,,A wise tinkerer saves all the parts., Using his rationale, resource managers now advocate what is often termed the,precautionary principle,, a philosophy that says when decisions are made in uncertain circumstances, we should err on the side of conservation. Scientists and resource managers now agree that, while more research and study will always be necessary, even imperfectly designed reserves provide significant benefits.

,Because they are defined by geographical boundaries, marine protected areas offer an approach to conservation that takes the entire ecosystem of a particular area into consideration, rather than targeting specific species for protection, says Dr. Edward Houde, chair of a National Research Council committee that just released a report on marine reserves. Houde, who is also a professor at the University of Maryland's Center for Environmental Sciences, continues,,Declining or poorly managed fish populations and damage to marine habitats are discouraging signs that conventional ocean management practices are insufficient, while recent research demonstrates that properly designed reserves can be effective tools for protecting and restoring ocean ecosystems.,

Lessons From Experience

As California and the National Marine Sanctuary program were used as examples to illustrate how the term marine reserve can be deceiving, it's only fair to turn to them once again for some success stories. The Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, America's fourth largest, has been described as one of the most regulated tracts of ocean in the United States. Still, for the past several decades there have been crashes in the populations of sea urchins, abalone and other fin fishes. But for over 20 years a 30-plus-acre segment off the north shore of Anacapa Island has been set aside as a no-take reserve. Today, it has become arguably the best-studied reserve in America, and research has clearly documented the benefits of its protected status. For example, after severe El Ni–o events, large tracts of California's famous kelp forests are uprooted and often take between eight to 10 years to recover. But inside the reserve, recovery takes only a year or two.

Another example is the red urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus), which have been heavily harvested by a commercial fishery for their roe (eggs), a delicacy in the sushi restaurants of Japan. The problem is, without the red urchins, the purple urchins (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) proliferate due to the lack of predation and competition. The altered ecological balance can be devastating, given that one of the favorite foods of the purple urchins is the rootlike holdfasts of the kelp. With nothing to hold them in place, these massive forests simply wash ashore, denuding the undersea terrain as effectively as slashing and burning a tropical rain forest. Not surprisingly, the proportion of reds to purples, and thus the ecological balance, within the reserve remains normal. Just outside the reserve, the reds have virtually disappeared. It's also been documented that the reserve contains significantly more of all species, from lobsters to abalone. One researcher has described the function of this and other reserves as providing,breathing room, where depleted wildlife populations have a chance to recover.

Similar results have been found in California's Point Lobos State Park, where there are roughly 20 percent more fish, along with a greater diversity and larger size, inside than outside this small 3-square-kilometer no-take reserve. It has also been documented from Point Lobos to the Bahamas that these larger-sized fish, which are prime targets when not protected, produce greater quantities of larva. With snappers, for example, one large adult can produce as much as 200 small adults. Moreover, many of these larvae spill over and repopulate the surrounding areas outside the reserves. This is, in fact, a powerful rationale for the establishment of the marine reserve in Florida's Dry Tortugas.

Additional examples include a twofold to threefold increase in egg production by rockfish in a California reserve. The recent NRC study cited previously found that nearly 60 percent of the reserves examined had a greater number of species than in adjacent, unprotected water. With regard to habitat protection, researchers in St. Lucia discovered that overfishing of the herbivorous parrotfish, major consumers of algae, led to algal overgrowth and decline of coral reefs. In a nearby reserve, parrotfish populations remained intact, and so did the health of the coral reef.

The Take-Home Message

It should not be taken from this discussion that marine reserves are a panacea for the destruction and depletion of the world ocean. Certainly, marine reserves are not the reason for all the positive examples of marine species recovering or prospering. However, it's now clear that, in combination with other locally appropriate management strategies, no-take reserves can be a big part of the success story. As a report from the Center for Marine Conservation points out,,Marine reserves alone cannot substitute for good fisheries and coastal management strategies. But they can directly protect marine biodiversity and ensure that some areas are insulated from the risks of traditional management.,

It is perhaps easy to figure why most people have a hard time understanding or appreciating the dire plight of the ocean. After all, few are able to see below the surface. But this excuse does not hold for those fortunate few who, because of scuba, know the sea so intimately. Anyone who has established a base of experience as a diver understands that things are getting worse, not better, beneath the waves. Marine reserves, true aquatic wilderness areas, can help reverse that trend, but only if we make a commitment to support their establishment. Please do your part to ensure that more of the aquatic world is free from exploitation.

Tortugas Update

The Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary has released a final plan (final supplemental environmental impact statement/final supplemental management plan) to protect the remote coral reefs of the Tortugas, more than 70 miles (113 km) west of Key West, by establishing a no-take ecological reserve.

The sanctuary received more than 4,000 comments on its draft plan for the Tortugas Ecological Reserve, more than 90 percent supporting the no-take reserve as essential for protecting some of the healthiest and most diverse coral reefs in the region.,This strong support for the Tortugas Ecological Reserve shows that the public understands that protecting the Tortugas is likely to benefit the health of the entire sanctuary and beyond, said Sanctuary Superintendent Billy Causey.

As proposed in the draft plan, the Tortugas Ecological Reserve would encompass 151 square nautical miles in two sections. Tortugas North would include approximately 91 square nautical miles, including the northern portion of Tortugas Bank and Sherwood Forest, an area of lush coral growth that stretches for several miles. Tortugas South would include 60 square nautical miles surrounding Riley's Hump, capturing an important spawning area for snapper and grouper, as well as deepwater habitat for golden crab, snowy grouper and tilefish.

Approximately 55 square nautical miles of the proposed reserve fall within existing sanctuary boundaries. The plan would expand sanctuary boundaries to cover the remaining 96 square nautical miles, which would allow the sanctuary to address threats posed by anchoring and vessel discharge.

The regulations for the Tortugas Ecological Reserve would prohibit taking of all marine life, as well as anchoring, mooring by vessels more than 100 feet (30 m) in combined length and vessel discharge. Existing sanctuary-wide regulations also would apply to the reserve.

A simple no-cost, phone-in permit system would govern access to Tortugas North to ensure that all vessels have access to mooring buoys, ease enforcement and assist in monitoring visitor impacts.

In response to comments received on the draft plan, the sanctuary will prohibit diving and snorkeling in Tortugas South. Limiting access to Tortugas South to continuous transit by vessels with fishing gear stowed will assist the sanctuary in controlling poaching in this remote area, providing additional protection to the area's critical resources. Socioeconomic studies have shown no nonconsumptive diving and snorkeling occurring in this area.

The sanctuary based the Tortugas Ecological Reserve plan on a proposal drafted by the Tortugas 2000 working group and adopted by the Sanctuary Advisory Council. The 25-member working group included commercial and recreational fishermen, divers, scientists, conservationists, citizens-at-large and resource managers.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the governor and cabinet must approve no-take regulations for the reserve before they can take effect in state waters. In addition, the National Park Service has proposed a type of no-take area called a Research Natural Area, compatible with the sanctuary's reserve in its revisions to the General Management Plan for Dry Tortugas National Park. These combined actions would result in a world-class, no-take, ecological reserve in the Tortugas.

Further Reading:

Marine and Coastal Protected Areas: A Guide for Planners and Managers,

by Rodney Salm and John Clark.

Copies can be ordered from:

IUCN Marine Program

1630 Connecticut Ave. NW

Washington, DC 20009

fax: (202) 387-4823

e-mail: oceans@icuns.org

Web site: www.iucn.org/bookstore/index.htm

For more information on marine reserves and how you can help, contact:

Center for Marine Conservation

1725 DeSales Street, N.W.

Suite 600

Washington, DC 20036

phone: (202)429-5609

fax: (202) 872-0619

Web site: www.cmc-ocean.org