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Title: | How good is your marine protected area at curbing threats? |
Authors: | Zupan, Mirta Bulleri, Fabio Evans, Julian Fraschetti, Simonetta Guidetti, Paolo Garcia-Rubies, Antoni Sostres, Marta Asnaghi, Valentina Caro, Anthony Deudero, Salud Goni, Raquel Guarnieri, Giuseppe Guilhaumon, Francois Kersting, Diego Kurt Kokkali, Athina Kruschel, Claudia Macic, Vesna Mangialajo, Luisa Mallol, Sandra Macpherson, Enrique Panucci, Antonella Radolovic, Mirko Ramdani, Mohamed Schembri, Patrick J. Terlizzi, Antonio Villa, Elisa Claudet, Joachim |
Keywords: | Marine parks and reserves -- Management Marine parks and reserves -- Mediterranean Region Coastal ecosystem health -- Mediterranean Region Biodiversity conservation -- Mediterranean Region |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
Publisher: | Elsevier Ltd. |
Citation: | Zupan, M., Bulleri, F., Evans, J., Fraschetti, S., Guidetti, P., Garcia-Rubies, A.,... Claudet, J. (2018). How good is your marine protected area at curbing threats?. Biological Conservation, 221, 237-245. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2018.03.013 |
Abstract: | Marine protected areas (MPAs) are key tools to mitigate human impacts in coastal environments, promoting sustainable activities to conserve biodiversity. The designation of MPAs alone may not result in the lessening of some human threats, which is highly dependent on management goals and the related specific regulations that are adopted. Here, we develop and operationalize a local threat assessment framework. We develop indices to quantify the effectiveness of MPAs (or individual zones within MPAs in the case of multiple-use MPAs) in reducing anthropogenic extractive and non-extractive threats operating at local scale, focusing specifically on threats that can be managed through MPAs. We apply this framework in 15 Mediterranean MPAs to assess their threat reduction capacity. We show that fully protected areas effectively eliminate extractive activities, whereas the intensity of artisanal and recreational fishing within partially protected areas, paradoxically, is higher than that found outside MPAs, questioning their ability at reaching conservation targets. In addition, both fully and partially protected areas attract non-extractive activities that are potential threats. Overall, only three of the 15 MPAs had lower intensities for the entire set of eight threats considered, in respect to adjacent control unprotected areas. Understanding the intensity and occurrence of human threats operating at the local scale inside and around MPAs is important for assessing MPAs effectiveness in achieving the goals they have been designed for, informing management strategies, and prioritizing specific actions. |
URI: | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/30078 |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacSciBio |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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32. Zupan et al (2018) Assessing MPA effectiveness.pdf Restricted Access | 1.19 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open Request a copy |
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