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Marine Conservation: Good for Fish! Good for People? Giselle Samonte, Conservation International, USAXuanwen Wang, Conservation International, USAAdele Catzim, Belize ISIS Enterprises, BelizePatrick Fong, University of the South Pacific, FijiJuan Mate, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama Daniel Suman, University of Miami, USADiego Quiroga, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador Carlos Mena, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, EcuadorLeah Karrer, Conservation International, USA
3rd National Forum on Socioeconomics Research
in Coastal Systems
May 26-28, 2010, New Orleans, Louisiana
People depend on oceans
• Worldwide fisheries catch value is US $80-85B annually• US$5.7B net benefit from coral reef fisheries• US $7.5K to $167.5 K /sq-km annually seafood market value from mangroves
What are Marine Managed Areas?
• multi-use, ocean zoning schemes of several types of sub-areas– no-take areas (e.g., no fishing)
– buffer zones with particular restrictions (e.g., no oil drilling)
• address different issues and objectives– multiple uses (e.g., fishing, tourism) – extractive human uses are allowed (e.g., fishing).– specific use restriction (e.g., local fishing)
To determine the socioeconomic effects of marine managed areas.
Objective
Socio-economic Variables
•Demographics•Household income•Resource use patterns•Local values and beliefs on marine resources•Level of understanding of human impact on resources
Governance is key to managing oceans
Perceptions on non-monetary benefits
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
% positive response
coral reefs mangroves coastal areas seaweed
Greater income
0
200
400
600
800
1000
MMA Beneficiaries (n=362) Non-MMA Beneficiaries (n=162)
Respondents
Mar
ine
Rel
ated
In
com
e (U
S $
) Mean
Lower95% CI
Upper95% CI
2.
Diversity of marine related livelihood-Cross Node (%)
Fishing, 71.3
Tourism, 18.3
,Boat Driver/Diver10.0 Other, 0.4
% Respondents with tourism related livelihoods inaddition to fishing
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
MMA Beneficiaries (n=1,173) Non-MMA Beneficiaries(n=1,211)
Respondents
Mean
Lower95% CI
Upper95% CI
More diversified livelihoods
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Environmental Awarness
Perc
enta
ge
Mean
Lower95% CI
Upper95% CI
Improved environmental awareness
MMA beneficiaries consume fish/seafood almost daily (ie, every 2 days); 35% perceive that their health situation has improved
compared to 10 years ago;
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
Much better or better(n=540)
Neither better or worse(n=618)
Much worse or worse(n=365)
Perception on health
Per
cent
age
Mean
Lower95% CI
Upper95% CI
Managing oceans for human well-being
Economic incentives
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