Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4379585 Global Ecology and Conservation 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We used a BACI design to test whether greater enforcement improved marine sanctuary performance.•New enforcement initiatives resulted in a 201% increase in annual fine rate.•Greater enforcement resulted in more target fish in the marine sanctuary compared to fished areas.•Strengthened enforcement can help underperforming marine sanctuaries meet conservation goals.

Marine sanctuaries are areas where the extraction of biota is not permitted. Although most marine sanctuaries have a positive influence on biotic communities, not all sanctuaries are meeting their conservation objectives. Amidst possible explanations (e.g., size, age and isolation), insufficient enforcement is often speculated to be a key driver of marine sanctuary underperformance. Despite this, there are few studies directly linking quantitative enforcement data to changes in biotic communities within marine sanctuaries. Here, we used an asymmetrical-BACI experimental design from 2006–2012 to test whether new enforcement initiatives enhanced abundances of target fishes and threatened species in an existing large sub-tropical marine sanctuary relative to areas open to fishing. Implementation of the new enforcement initiatives in 2010 was associated with a 201% increase in annual fine rate and a significant increase in target fish and elasmobranch abundance, as well as sightings of a critically-endangered shark, in the marine sanctuary relative to areas open to fishing. Overall, these results demonstrate that strengthening enforcement can have a rapid positive influence on target fish and perhaps threatened species in a subtropical marine sanctuary. From this, we contend that increased enforcement guided by risk-based compliance planning and operations may be a useful first step for improving underperforming marine sanctuaries.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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