16 research outputs found
Designing marine reserves to reflect local socioeconomic conditions: lessons from long-enduring customary management systems
Coral reef conservation strategies such as marine protected areas have met limited success in many developing countries. Some researchers attribute part of these shortcomings to inadequate attention to the social context of conserving marine resources. To gain insights into applying Western conservation theory more successfully in the socioeconomic context of developing countries, this study examines how long-enduring, customary reef closures appear to reflect local socioeconomic conditions in two Papua New Guinean communities. Attributes of the customary management (including size, shape, permanence, and gear restrictions) are examined in relation to prevailing socioeconomic conditions (including resource users’ ability to switch gears, fishing grounds, and occupations). Customary closures in the two communities appear to reflect local socioeconomic circumstances in three ways. First, in situations where people can readily switch between occupations, full closures are acceptable with periodic harvests to benefit from the closure. In comparison, communities with high dependence on the marine resources are more conducive to employing strategies that restrict certain gear types while still allowing others. Second, where there is multiple clan and family spatial ownership of resources, the communities have one closure per clan/family; one large no-take area would have disproportionate affect on those compared to the rest of the community. In contrast, communities that have joint ownership can establish one large closure as long as there are other areas available to harvest. Third, historical and trade relationships with neighboring communities can influence regulations by creating the need for occasional harvests to provide fish for feasts. This study further demonstrates the importance of understanding the socioeconomic context of factors such as community governance and levels of dependence for the conservation of marine resources
Erosion of Traditional Marine Management Systems in the Face of Disturbances in the Nicobar Archipelago
11 páginas, 3 tablas, 2 figurasTo sustainably manage naturally scarce resources,
island communities often evolve complex mechanisms including
customary laws, belief systems, and reciprocity arrangements
among others, to prevent overharvest. Their effectiveness
depends largely on the extent to which resource users
comply with the rules. We examined patterns of compliance
with traditional marine management in the Nicobar
Archipelago, India, before, and six years after, the 2004 tsunami.
We used interview-based surveys to document marine
harvest regulations, and changes in compliance patterns. Our
results indicate that pre-tsunami, complex harvest rules
existed, including spatio-temporal closures, gear restrictions
and species bans; many reefs were subject to multiple, overlapping
restrictions. Post-tsunami, compliance weakened considerably;
younger individuals (19–35 years) and individuals
receiving tsunami aid (boats, gear, etc.) were the most likely
non-compliers. Around 84 % of interviewees attributed declining
compliance directly to post-tsunami changes in resource
availability and a perceived decline in traditional authority.
Changes in resource availability can interact strongly
with institutional decline, eroding the resilience of traditional
management.Peer reviewe
Cannibalism in spiderlings is not only about starvation
International audienceMany species show a transient group life, and dispersal often coincides with the onset of agonistic behaviors. Changes in the nature of interactions among conspecifics can rely on a variation in the production of communication cues and/or on a switch in the processing of social information. The relative contribution of each process on the initiation of aggression still remains to be investigated. Spiders constitute relevant models to address this issue since all solitary species undergo a transient gregarious phase prior dispersal. In this study, we developed a combination of behavioral and physiological assays to examine the mechanisms accompanying the onset of agonistic interactions in spiderlings of the solitary species Agelena labyrinthica. Juveniles of different developmental stages were supplied with diets differing in prey availability. We showed that unfed spiderlings never molted, retained their cuticular lipid signature, and did not behave aggressively. This contrasted with fed individuals that molted, changed their cuticular profiles, and displayed agonistic interactions and cannibalism. We demonstrated that depletion in lipid stores was not sufficient to elicit aggression or cannibalism. Our analysis also revealed that major shifts in cuticular profiles only occurred after the first molt outside the cocoon. The lack of agonistic interactions in unfed spiderlings suggests an absence of behavioral plasticity in response to food shortage at the earliest developmental stages. We propose that the initiation of aggression relies more on a shift in the production of cuticular cues accompanying molting rather than on changes in information processing depending on the physiological state of individuals