Author:
Jupiter Stacy D,Cohen Philippa J,Weeks Rebecca,Tawake Alifereti,Govan Hugh
Abstract
Community-based management and co-management are mainstream approaches to marine conservation and
sustainable resource management. In the tropical Pacific, these approaches have proliferated through locally-managed
marine areas (LMMAs). LMMAs have garnered support because of their adaptability to different contexts and focus on
locally identified objectives, negotiated and implemented by stakeholders. While LMMA managers may be knowledgeable
about their specific sites, broader understanding of objectives, management actions and outcomes of local management
efforts remain limited. We interviewed 50 practitioners from the tropical Pacific and identified eight overarching objectives
for LMMA establishment and implementation: (1) enhancing long-term sustainability of resource use; (2) increasing shortterm
harvesting efficiency; (3) restoring biodiversity and ecosystems; (4) maintaining or restoring breeding biomass of
fish or invertebrates; (5) enhancing the economy and livelihoods; (6) reinforcing customs; (7) asserting access and
tenure rights; and (8) empowering communities. We reviewed outcomes for single or multiple objectives from published
studies of LMMAs and go on to highlight synergies and trade-offs among objectives. The management actions or ʻtoolsʼ
implemented for particular objectives broadly included: permanent closures; periodically-harvested closures; restrictions
on gear, access or species; livelihood diversification strategies; and participatory and engagement processes. Although
LMMAs are numerous and proliferating, we found relatively few cases in the tropical Pacific that adequately described
how objectives and management tools were negotiated, reported the tools implemented, or empirically tested outcomes
and seldom within a regional context. This paper provides some direction for addressing these research gaps.
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology
Cited by
161 articles.
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