Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T18:40:07.381Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Poverty and the use of destructive fishing gear near east African marine protected areas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2010

J. E. CINNER*
Affiliation:
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4810, Australia Wildlife Conservation Society, Marine Programs, 2300 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, New York, NY 10460, USA
*
*Correspondence: Dr Joshua Cinner, ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD 4811Australia e-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Poverty may be an important influence on the exploitation of marine resources in tropical developing countries. A number of studies have hypothesized that destructive fishing gears, which can degrade habitat, capture high proportions of juvenile fish and ultimately lead to reduced yields, are primarily used by the poorer segments of society. However, few studies have empirically tested this relationship. This paper examines relationships between the use of destructive seine nets and thirteen socioeconomic conditions in communities adjacent to three peri-urban marine protected areas in east Africa. Fishers using destructive gears were younger, less likely to have capital invested in the fishery, had lower fortnightly expenditures and were poorer in two multivariate indices of material style of life. Based on the two multivariate material style of life indices, a binary logistic regression model classified whether fishers used destructive gears with almost 70% accuracy. These findings are broadly consistent with the literature on poverty traps, which are situations in which the poor are unable to mobilize the resources required to overcome low-income situations and consequently engage in behaviour that may reinforce their own poverty. Managers aiming to reduce destructive gear use may need to partner with civil society and donors to help break poverty traps.

Type
EC Perspectives
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allison, E. & Ellis, F. (2001) The livelihoods approach and management of small-scale fisheries. Marine Policy 25: 377–88.Google Scholar
Bene, C. (2003) When fishery rhymes with poverty: a first step beyond the old paradigm on poverty in small-scale fisheries. World Development 31: 949975.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, C.B., Marenya, P.P., Mcpeak, J., Minten, B., Murithi, F., Oluoch-Kosura, W., Place, F., Randrianarisoa, J.C., Rasambainarivo, J. & Wangila, J. (2006) Welfare dynamics in rural Kenya and Madagascar. Journal of Development Studies 42: 248277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunce, M., Mee, L., Rodwell, L. & Gibb, R. (2009) Collapse and recovery in a remote small island- a tale of adaptive cycles or downward spirals? Global Environmental Change 19: 213226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassels, S., Curran, S. & Kramer, R. (2005) Do migrants degrade coastal environments? Migration, natural resource extraction and poverty in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Human Ecology 33: 329363.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cinner, J. & Aswani, S. (2007) Integrating customary management into marine conservation. Biological Conservation 140: 201216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cinner, J.E., Daw, T.M. & McClanahan, T.R. (2009 c) Socioeconomic factors that affect artisanal fishers’ readiness to exit a declining fishery. Conservation Biology 23: 124130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cinner, J., McClanahan, T.R., Abunge, C. & Wamukota, A. (2009 d) Human dimensions of conserving Kenya's coral reefs. In: Advances in Coastal Ecology: People, Processes and Ecosystems in Kenya, African Studies Collection Volume 20, ed. Hoorweg, J. & Muthiga, N.A., pp. 6078. Leiden, the Netherlands: African Studies Centre.Google Scholar
Cinner, J., McClanahan, T., Daw, T., Graham, N.A.J., Maina, J., Wilson, S.K. & Hughes, T.P. (2009 a) Linking social and ecological systems to sustain coral reef fisheries. Current Biology 19: 206212.Google Scholar
Cinner, J., McClanahan, T., Graham, N.A.J., Pratchett, M., Wilson, S.K. & Raina, J.B. (2009 b) Gear-based fisheries management as a potential adaptive response to climate change and coral mortality. Journal of Applied Ecology 46: 724732.Google Scholar
Cinner, J., McClanahan, T. & Wamukota, A. (2010) Differences in livelihoods, socioeconomic characteristics, and environmental perceptions between fishers and non-fishers living near and far from marine parks on the Kenyan coast. Marine Policy 34: 2228.Google Scholar
Coulthard, S. (2008) Adapting to environmental change in artisanal fisheries. Insights from a South Indian Lagoon. Global Environmental Change 18: 479489.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, P. (1997) Nutritional status, the capacity for work, and poverty traps. Journal of Econometrics 77: 537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donner, S.D. & Portere, D. (2007) The inequity of the global threat to coral reefs. Bioscience 57: 157162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enfors, E.I. & Gordon, L.J. (2008) Dealing with drought: the challenge of using water system technologies to break dryland poverty traps. Global Environmental Change 18: 607616.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, L.S. (2009) Understanding divergent perspectives in marine governance in Kenya. Marine Policy 33: 784793.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, N.A.J., McClanahan, T.R., MacNeil, M.A., Wilson, S.K., Polunin, N.V.C., Jennings, S., Chabanet, P., Clark, S., Spalding, M.D., Letourneur, Y., Bigot, L., Galzin, R., Ohman, M.C., Garpe, K.C., Edwards, A.J. & Sheppard, C.R.C. (2008) Climate warming, marine protected areas and the ocean-scale integrity of coral reef ecosystems. PLoS ONE 3 (8): e3039.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Guard, M. & Masaiganah, M. (1997) Dynamite fishing in Southern Tanzania, geographical variation, intensity of use and possible solutions. Marine Pollution Bulletin 34: 758762.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hicks, C., McClanahan, T.R., Cinner, J. & Mills, J. (2009) Trade offs in ecological goods and services associated with different coral reef management strategies. Ecology and Society: 14: 10.Google Scholar
Jackson, J.B, Kirby, M.X., Berger, W.H., Bjorndal, K.A., Botsford, L.W., Bourque, B.J., Bradbury, R.H., Cooke, R., Erlandson, J., Estes, J.A., Hughes, T.P., Kidwell, S., Lange, C.B., Lenihan, H.S., Pandolfi, J.M., Peterson, C.H., Steneck, R.S., Tegner, M.J. & Warner, R.R. (2001) Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal ecosystems. Science 293: 629637.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jiddawi, N.S & Ohman, M. (2002) Marine fisheries in Tanzania 2002. Ambio 31: 518536.Google Scholar
Jones, R. & Steven, A. (1997) Effects of cyanide on corals in relation to cyanide fishing on reefs. Marine and Freshwater Research 48: 517–22.Google Scholar
Mangi, S.C. & Roberts, C.M. (2006) Quantifying the environmental impacts of artisanal fishing gear on Kenya's coral reef ecosystems. Marine Pollution Bulletin 52: 16461660.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mangi, S.C., Roberts, C.M. & Rodwell, L.D. (2007) Financial comparisons of fishing gear used in Kenya's coral reef lagoons. Ambio 36: 671676.Google Scholar
McClanahan, T.R. & Mangi, S. (2001) The effect of a closed area and beach seine exclusion on coral reef fish catches. Fisheries Management and Ecology 8: 107121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClanahan, T.R. & Mangi, S. (2004) Gear-based management of a tropical artisanal fishery based on species selectivity and capture size. Fisheries Management and Ecology 11: 5160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClanahan, T.R, Cinner, J., Maina, J., Graham, N.A.J., Daw, T.M., Stead, S.M., Wamukota, A., Brown, K., Ateweberhan, M., Venus, V. & Polunin, N.V.C. (2008 b) Conservation action in a changing climate. Conservation Letters 1: 5359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClanahan, T.R., Glasel, H., Rubens, J. & Kiambo, R. (1997) The effects of traditional fisheries management on fisheries yields and the coral-reef ecosystems of southern Kenya. Environmental Conservation 24: 105120.Google Scholar
McClanahan, T.R., Hicks, C. & Darling, E. (2008 a) Malthusian overfishing and efforts to overcome it on Kenyan coral reefs. Ecological Applications 18: 15161529.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McClanahan, T.R., Maina, S. & Davies, J. (2005) Perception of resource users and mangers towards fisheries management options in Kenyan coral reefs. Fisheries Management and Ecology 12: 105112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Narayan, D. (1997) Voices of the Poor: Poverty and Social Capital in Tanzania. Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development Studies and Monograph Series no 20. Washington, DC, USA: World Bank.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newton, K., Cote, I.M., Pilling, G.M., Jennings, S. & Dulvy, N.K. (2007) Current and future sustainability of island coral reef fisheries. Current Biology 17: 655658.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Obura, D. (2001) Participatory monitoring of shallow tropical marine fisheries by artisanal fishers in Diani, Kenya. Bulletin of Marine Science 69: 777791.Google Scholar
Pauly, D. (1990) On Malthusian overfishing. Naga, the ICLARM quarterly 13: 34.Google Scholar
Pet-Soede, L., Cesar, H. & Pet, J. (1999) An economic analysis of blast fishing on Indonesian coral reefs. Environmental Conservation 26: 8393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pollnac, R.B., Pomeroy, R.S. & Harkes, I.H.T. (2001) Fishery policy and job satisfaction in three southeast Asian fisheries. Journal of Econometrics 77: 537.Google Scholar
Pollnac, R.B. & Poggie, J. (2006) Job satisfaction in the fishery in two southeast Alaskan towns. Human Organization 65: 332342.Google Scholar
Sievanen, L., Crawford, B., Pollnac, R. & Lowe, C. (2005) Weeding through assumptions of livelihood approaches in ICM: seaweed farming in the Philippines and Indonesia. Ocean and Coastal Management 48: 297313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Signa, D., Tuda, P. & Samoilys, M. (2008) Social, economic, and environmental impacts of beach seining in Kenya. CORDIO report, Mombasa, Kenya.Google Scholar
Silva, P. (2006) Exploring the linkages between poverty, marine protected area management, and the use of destructive fishing gear in Tanzania. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3831, World Bank, Washington, DC, USA.Google Scholar
Tobey, J. & Torell, E. (2006) Coastal poverty and MPA management in mainland Tanzania and Zanzibar. Ocean and Coastal Management 49: 834854.Google Scholar
Verheij, E., Makoloweka, S. & Kalombo, H. (2004) Collaborative coastal management improves coral reefs and fisheries in Tanga, Tanzania. Ocean and Coastal Management 47: 309320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar