Are marine reserves and harvest control rules substitutes or complements for rebuilding fisheries?
Date
2015
Authors
Yamazaki, Satoshi
Jennings, Sarah
Kompas, Tom
Grafton, Quentin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Harvest control rules and no-take marine reserves are two management
approaches increasingly advocated as effective means
of rebuilding depleted fish stocks and averting the collapse of
fisheries. We incorporate the two approaches into a bioeconomic
model and evaluate how they act as substitutes and/or complements
when used together in fisheries stock recovery plans.
Simulations ofthe model with estimated parameters from an actual
fishery show that the cost of adopting a harvest strategy of slow
stock rebuilding can be offset or substituted by a no-take reserve.
For each of the harvest strategies explored, we find there is a range
of reserve sizes that can act as a complement in a stock recovery
plan such that a no-take reserve improves both the profitability
of fishers and average annual harvest during stock rebuilding.
We demonstrate that a stock recovery plan that incorporates both
harvest control rules and no-take reserves can simultaneously contribute
to conservation, economic and socio-economic objectives of
fisheries management.
Description
Keywords
Fisheries management, Harvest control rules, Marine reserves, Stock recovery plans
Citation
Collections
Source
Resource and Energy Economics
Type
Journal article