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Poaching and the Success of Marine Reserves Suresh A. Sethi School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences 7/06.

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Presentation on theme: "Poaching and the Success of Marine Reserves Suresh A. Sethi School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences 7/06."— Presentation transcript:

1 Poaching and the Success of Marine Reserves Suresh A. Sethi School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences 7/06

2 Background Marine reserves are proposed as tools to augment fisheries: -habitat protection -spillover -age structure protection These are best case scenarios…poaching within reserves may significantly affect the biological and economic outcomes of reserves. Photo from NMFS

3 Questions 1. What are the biological effects of poaching inside and out of reserves? -Abundances, age structure, yield 2. What are the economic effects? -Closely linked to the biological effects through CPUE. 3. What are the drivers of poaching? -Wealth status, expected profits, opportunity cost of time 4. What are effective enforcement measures? -Monitoring, fines, rewards, education

4 Biological Effects: Age structure analysis with maternal effects on larval survival Some Assumptions: -B-H recruitment relationship -Sedentary adults, common pool larvae mixture (abalone, scallop, rockfish) -Lingcod life history characteristics -Asymptotic knifedge selectivity, maturity -Maternal effects on larval survival: RLS = -1.58 + 2.58(1-e^(-.247*age)) Age Structure

5 Effort Readjusts Outside

6 Effort Constant Outside

7 B40% Rule for Outside Only

8 Conclusions: -Yield is lower with a reserve in place -Poaching can quickly reduce the age structure benefits from marine reserves by reducing SSB in reserves and resulting ELO. -If age structure protection is a primary goal of reserves, enforcement of reserve will be a key determinant in the success of the reserve. -Raises question about whether or not populations inside the reserve should be considered in the B40% rule. Age Structure Photo from Fisheries and Oceans Canada

9 Biological Effects: 2Box model with logistic growth, adult movement, and poaching as a function of profit 2Box Model

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12 Future Work Age Structure Model: -incorporate movement and space 2Box Logistic Model: -expand into spatial model -alternative ways of modelling poaching behavior -poaching in open areas -heterogeneous costs based on location (space)

13 Thank You! Funding: SAFS ARCS Thanks to R. Hilborn and his lab, and A. Haynie.

14 Age Structure Biological Effects: Age structure analysis with maternal effects on larval survival

15 Age Structure Biological Effects: Age structure analysis with maternal effects on larval survival

16 Previous Work Majority of prior modeling work considers reserves to be 100% effective, i.e. no poaching. Of 800+ papers on marine reserves, only 3 consider noncompliance within reserve boundaries.

17 Previous Work Little et al. (2005), Kritzer (2004): -2D spatial models to examine the effects of poaching on different shaped reserves. -Found if poaching is a function of distance from an edge, single large reserves are more robust than several small reserves. -Poaching negated benefits of reserves even at high F. Hallwood (2005): -Analytical model of sustainable rents in a reserve-fishery complex when there is costly enforcement of reserve areas. -Optimization finds that m. benefit of policing = m. cost of policing, optimal stock size may be smaller than size without poaching

18 No S-R Relationship

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