Simulating benefits, costs and trade‐offs of spatial management in marine social‐ecological systems

Author:

Ovando Daniel1ORCID,Bradley Darcy234,Burns Echelle234,Thomas Lennon234,Thorson James5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. Marine Science Institute, University of California Santa Barbara California USA

3. Bren School of Environmental Science & Management University of California Santa Barbara California USA

4. Environmental Markets Lab University of California Santa Barbara California USA

5. Habitat and Ecological Processes Research Program, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, NOAA, NMFS, NOAA Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractDesigning effective spatial management strategies is challenging because marine ecosystems are highly dynamic and opaque, and extractive entities such as fishing fleets respond endogenously to ecosystem changes in ways that depend on ecological and policy context. We present a modelling framework, marlin, that can be used to efficiently simulate the bio‐economic dynamics of marine systems in support of both management and research. We demonstrate marlin's capabilities by focusing on two case studies on the conservation and food production impacts of marine protected areas (MPAs): a coastal coral reef and a pelagic tuna fishery. In the coastal coral reef example, we explore how heterogeneity in species distributions and fleet preferences can affect distributional outcomes of MPAs. In the pelagic case study, we show how our model can be used to assess the climate resilience of different MPA design strategies, as well as the climate sensitivity of different fishing fleets. This paper demonstrates how intermediate complexity simulation of coupled bio‐economic dynamics can help communities predict and potentially manage trade‐offs among conservation, fisheries yields and distributional outcomes of management policies affected by spatial bio‐economic dynamics.

Funder

Waitt Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference61 articles.

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