121,918 research outputs found
Public Opinion on Marine Protected Areas
The following results are based on a survey conducted by WWF-Canada to find out more about Canadians' opinions about marine protected areas
Marine Protected Areas and commercial fisheries: the existing fishery in potential protected areas, and a modelling study of the impact of protected areas on North Sea Plaice
Dit rapport presenteert resultaten van onderzoek, dat in 2005/2006 is uitgevoerd. In het kader van de Europese Vogel en Habitat Richtlijnen dienen lidstaten te beschermen gebieden op zee aan te wijzen, wat mogelijk zou leiden tot beperkingen van visserijactiviteiten in deze gebieden. De vraag was, welke invloed dit zou hebben op de vis en visserij. In dit onderzoek is enerzijds een statische beschrijving opgesteld van de visserijinspanning en de vangsten in de voorgestelde gebieden, en is anderzijds een eerste analyse (simulatie-model) opgezet van het lange-termijn effect op migrerende vis (schol). Dit onderzoek werd eind 2006 afgerond met een concept-rapport
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Changes in NDVI and human population in protected areas on the Tibetan Plateau
Understanding the Tibetan Plateauâs role in environmental change has gained increasing scientific
attention in light of warming and changes in landmanagement. We examine changes in greenness over
the Tibetan Plateau using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) from the Global Inventory
Monitoring and Modeling Study (GIMMS3g) to identify significant changes over the entire plateau, six
ecoregions, and protected areas based on a multiyear time series of July imagery from 1982 to 2015. We
also test whether there have been changes in human populations in protected areas. There has been
relatively little change in mean NDVI over the Tibetan Plateau or ecoregions, however, there were
significant changes at the pixel level. There are sixty-nine protected areas on the Tibetan Plateau; sixtytwo
protected areas had no significant change in mean NDVI and seven protected areas experienced
a significant increase in NDVI. There has been an increase in population within protected areas from
2000 to 2015; however, mean populations significantly increased in two protected areas and significantly
decreased in four protected areas. Results suggest a slow greening of the Tibetan Plateau,
ecoregions, and protected areas, with a more rapid greening in northern Tibet at the pixel level. Most
protected areas are experiencing minor changes in NDVI independent of human population
From the Galalpagos to Tongariro: Recognizing and saving the most important places in the world
Protected areas are one of the less glamorous areas of international environmental law. They are commonly overshadowed by what are perceived as much more dramatic topics, which capture the public attention to a much greater degree.1 This is a highly ironic situation for three reasons. First, because protected areas are the foremost methods by which species and ecosystems are effectively preserved. Second, because protected areas are tangible, and are not merely theoretical constructs. Third, the obligation to create protected areas is one of the most long-standing goals in numerous environmental treaties. For a long time this goal was not tied to any specific outcomes, and the numbers of protected areas grew slowly. However, in the new century, due to an increased recognition of the above considerations, the international community has not only reiterated the goal to create more protected areas, they also set targets of what they want to achieve. The international interest is this area can be seen with a number of examples, such as marine protected areas and transboundary protected areas. Collectively, such support has lead to the creation, in total, of over 102,000 protected areas spread over the Earth
The worldwide costs of marine protected areas
Declines in marine harvests, wildlife, and habitats have prompted calls at both the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development and the 2003 World Parks Congress for the establishment of a global system of marine protected areas (MPAs). MPAs that restrict fishing and other human activities conserve habitats and populations and, by exporting biomass, may sustain or increase yields of nearby fisheries. Here we provide an estimate of the costs of a global MPA network, based on a survey of the running costs of 83 MPAs worldwide. Annual running costs per unit area spanned six orders of magnitude, and were higher in MPAs that were smaller, closer to coasts, and in high-cost, developed countries. Models extrapolating these findings suggest that a global MPA network meeting the World Parks Congress target of conserving 20â30% of the worldâs seas might cost between 19 billion annually to run and would probably create around one million jobs. Although substantial, gross network costs are less than current government expenditures on harmful subsidies to industrial fisheries. They also ignore potential private gains from improved fisheries and tourism and are dwarfed by likely social gains from increasing the sustainability of fisheries and securing vital ecosystem services
Marine Protected Areas in Fisheries Management
The use of protected areas as a fishery management tool has been suggested as a hedge against management failures and variation in harvests. A stochastic bioeconomic model of a two-species fishery will be used to test the performance of protected areas as a management tool in a fishery with heterogenous environments. Protected areas are analysed under density-dependent and sink-source dispersal relationships between environments within the fishery. The model is applied to Manning Bioregion in NSW. Protected area performance as a tool for fisheries will be analysed given the existing management arrangement. The focus of the study is placed on the biological and economic characteristics that yield benefits to the fishery.Fisheries, Fisheries management, bioeconomics, marine protected areas, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy, Q2, Q22, Q28, Q57,
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Strengthening the global system of protected areas post-2020: A perspective from the IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas
Protected areas are the cornerstones of biodiversity conservation and have never been more relevant than at the present time when the world is facing both a biodiversity and a climate change crisis. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA) has been helping to set global standards and best practice guidelines in protected area planning and management for 60 years. Following this guidance, many countries have made significant progress toward their Aichi Target 11 commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The global community will be coming together at the 15th Conference of the Parties of the CBD to set new biodiversity conservation targets for the next decade, as milestones to 2050 and a vision of âa world living in harmony with nature.â This paper lays out the WCPA perspective on priorities for supporting effective protected and conserved areas for the post-2020 era
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