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Bias in evaluating the effects of marine protected areas: the importance of baseline data for the Galapagos Marine Reserve

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2005

G.J. EDGAR
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador School of Zoology, Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute, University of Tasmania, GPO Box 252-05, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia
R.H. BUSTAMANTE
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador Northern Fisheries and Ecosystem Research Group, CSIRO Marine Research, PO Box 120 Cleveland 4163, QLD, Australia
J.-M. FARIÑA
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador Center for Advanced Studies in Ecology and Biodiversity (CASEB), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
M. CALVOPIÑA
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador
C. MARTÍNEZ
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador
M.V. TORAL-GRANDA
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin Research Station, Santa Cruz, Galapagos, Ecuador

Abstract

Analysis of ecological baseline data collected for key resource species within the Galapagos Marine Reserve indicates that variation in animal density associated with the location of fully protected zones can be comparable to protected area effects. Even with a high level of interspersion between conservation, tourism and fishing management zones, major differences in densities of economically important species were evident between zone types prior to enforcement of fishing restrictions. Densities of the most valuable fishery resource, sea cucumbers, were three times higher in zones that remained open to fishing compared to ‘no-take’ conservation zones, and densities of sharks were five times higher in tourism zones than fishing or conservation zones. These results highlight bias in the socio-political processes that can accompany selection of marine protected areas, where fishers attempt to minimize perceived impacts on their livelihood by locating large protected zones in resource-poor areas, and tourism operators and sport divers argue for protection of areas containing atypically-interesting features. Bias in the location of fully protected zones can seriously confound ‘control-impact’ field investigations when data prior to prohibitions on fishing are lacking, including meta-analyses, which are dominated by such potentially systematically biased studies.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2004 Foundation for Environmental Conservation

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