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Marine reserves and fishery profit: practical designs offer optimal solutions. Crow White, Bruce Kendall, Dave Siegel, and Chris Costello University of.

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Presentation on theme: "Marine reserves and fishery profit: practical designs offer optimal solutions. Crow White, Bruce Kendall, Dave Siegel, and Chris Costello University of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Marine reserves and fishery profit: practical designs offer optimal solutions. Crow White, Bruce Kendall, Dave Siegel, and Chris Costello University of California – Santa Barbara

2 Larval export No Fishing

3 Research Question: To maximize larval export (and thus benefit fisheries) should reserves be… …few and large, When is larval export maximized? …or many and small? SLOSS debate

4 Coastal fish & invert life history traits in model  Adults are sessile, reproducing seasonally (e.g. Brouwer et al. 2003, Lowe et al. 2003, Parsons et al. 2003)  Larvae disperse, mature after 1+ yrs (e.g. Dethier et al. 2003, Grantham et al. 2003)  Larva settlement and/or recruitment success decreases with increasing adult density at that location (post-dispersal density dependence) (e.g. Steele and Forrester 2002, Lecchini and Galzin 2003)

5 An integro-difference model describing coastal fish population dynamics: Adult abundance at location x during time-step t+1 Number of adults harvested Natural mortality of adults that escaped being harvested Fecundity Larval survival Larval dispersal (Gaussian) (Siegel et al. 2003) Larval recruitment at x Number of larvae that successfully recruit to location x

6 Incorporating Density Dependence Post-dispersal: Larva settlement and/or recruitment success decreases with increasing adult population density at that location.

7 FEW LARGE RESERVES SEVERAL SMALL RESERVES

8 θ = 5 θ = 0 Cost of catching one fish = Density of fish at that location θ

9 θ = 5 θ = 0 Bottom line for fishermen: Profit = Revenue - cost Cost of catching one fish = Density of fish at that location θ

10 θ = 20 θ = 0 Bottom line for fishermen: Profit = Revenue - cost Cost of catching one fish = Density of fish at that location θ

11 FEW LARGE RESERVES SEVERAL SMALL RESERVES

12 Scale bar = 100 km

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33 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios

34 Cost = θ/density

35 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios Cost = θ/density (Stop fishing when cost = $1)

36 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios Cost = θ/density (Stop fishing when cost = $1) Escapement = % of virgin K (K = 50)

37 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios Cost = θ/density (Stop fishing when cost = $1) Escapement = % of virgin K (K = 50) Zero-profit escapement level = θ/K = 40%

38 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios Cost = θ/density (Stop fishing when cost = $1) Escapement = % of virgin K (K = 50) Zero-profit escapement level = θ/K = 40%

39 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios θ/K = 15/50 = 30%

40 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios θ/K = 10/50 = 20%

41 A spectrum of high-profit scenarios θ/K = 5/50 = 10%

42 Summary 1.Post-dispersal density dependence generates larval export. 2.Larval export varies with reserve size and spacing. 3.Fishery yield and profit maximized via…  Less than ~15% coastline in reserves …Any reserve spacing option.  More than ~15% coastline in reserves …Several small or few medium-sized reserves.

43 Summary 4.Given optimal reserve spacing, a near-maximum profit is maintained across a spectrum of reserve and harvest scenarios: ReservesNone Many EscapementHighLow

44 Summary Along this spectrum exists an optimal reserve network scenario, based on the fisheries’ self-regulated escapement, that maximizes profits to the fishery. 4.Given optimal reserve spacing, a near-maximum profit is maintained across a spectrum of reserve and harvest scenarios: ReservesNone Many EscapementHighLow

45 University of California – Santa Barbara National Science Foundation THANK YOU!

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47 Older, bigger fish produce many more young

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49 Channel Islands

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52 FUTURE RESEARCH 1.Evaluate under post-dispersal dd where larvae recruitment success depends on sympatric larvae density. 2.Conduct analysis within a finite domain. 3.Add size structure to the fish population.

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55 Scale bar = 100 km

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57 Marine reserves and fishery profit: practical designs offer optimal solutions. Crow White, Bruce Kendall, Dave Siegel, and Chris Costello University of California – Santa Barbara


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