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Ocean zoning within a sparing versus sharing framework
Authors:Jennifer McGowan  Michael Bode  Matthew H Holden  Katrina Davis  Nils C Krueck  Maria Beger  Katherine L Yates  Hugh P Possingham
Institution:1.Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions,The University of Queensland,St Lucia,Australia;2.Department of Biological Sciences,Macquarie University,North Ryde,Australia;3.Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, School of Biological Sciences,The University of Queensland,St Lucia,Australia;4.Centre for Applications in Natural Resource Mathematics, School of Mathematics and Physics,The University of Queensland,St Lucia,Australia;5.Marine Spatial Ecology Lab and Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies,The University of Queensland,St Lucia,Australia;6.School of Environment and Life Sciences,University of Salford,Manchester,UK;7.Australian Institute of Marine Science,Townsville,Australia;8.The Nature Conservancy,Arlington,USA
Abstract:The land-sparing versus land-sharing debate centers around how different intensities of habitat use can be coordinated to satisfy competing demands for biodiversity persistence and food production in agricultural landscapes. We apply the broad concepts from this debate to the sea and propose it as a framework to inform marine zoning based on three possible management strategies, establishing: no-take marine reserves, regulated fishing zones, and unregulated open-access areas. We develop a general model that maximizes standing fish biomass, given a fixed management budget while maintaining a minimum harvest level. We find that when management budgets are small, sea-sparing is the optimal management strategy because for all parameters tested, reserves are more cost-effective at increasing standing biomass than traditional fisheries management. For larger budgets, the optimal strategy switches to sea-sharing because, at a certain point, further investing to grow the no-take marine reserves reduces catch below the minimum harvest constraint. Our intention is to illustrate how general rules of thumb derived from plausible, single-purpose models can help guide marine protected area policy under our novel sparing and sharing framework. This work is the beginning of a basic theory for optimal zoning allocations and should be considered complementary to the more specific spatial planning literature for marine reserve as nations expand their marine protected area estates.
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