freediver
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At my desk.
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So you agree then with detractors that the reasons given for the introduction of them are nothing but a lie, yet because you agree with the underlying stealth then the lie is justified...how interesting
Yes and no. I don't think the lie is justified. I think we are getting poorly designed marine parks as a result of that lie. It is also not necessarily a lie. Marine parks do protect biodiversity. It's just that they do this by managing fishing effort. Saying that they protect biodiversity instead of saying they managing fishing effort is not a lie. It isn't even an omission, because it is obvious how they work. Or at least, it should be. Many people probably do promote marine parks with only conservation in mind. To them, the fact that it is a fisheries management tool and the subtleties of the two different approaches don't really matter. A bureaucrat has a choice between saying 'conservation' and 'management' and will simply say whatever keeps him in a job. The only people I really blame are the fishermen who refuse to see them as fisheries management tools and who refuse to interact with fisheries managers in a way that gets the best outcome for fishermen, rather than an outcome that achieves the same level of conservation but causes unnecessary difficulty for fishermen. I blame the boat fishermen who want only to maintain their lead in the 'arms race' without considering what is best for the fishing community as a whole.
You obviously have never fished or navigated from a boat.
OK then, please enlighten us how you use triangulation from a boat.
No they won't
Yes they will. They have a higher ratio of circumference to area. To demonstrate, let's take this to the extreme. Imagine that the 20% was a single circular block somewhere on earth covering 20% of the water. There would be plenty of fish in it, and plenty of fish on the boundary. However, that bounty at the boundary would not make up for that vast area of not take zone. The net spillover would be negative. If you broke it into two 10% blocks, fishermen would be much better off. If you kept breaking it down further, you would eventually get positive spillover. As you approach the other extreme, you would get maximum spillover, but little biodiversity increase.
As you go to the the other extreme there are two main issues stopping you from going too small. One is practical enforcement issues. The other is that for small NTZ's, the boundary effects reduce the 'effective area of protection'. This includes things like the natural movement of fish over small time periods, their tendency to follow a burly trail out of the NTZ, casting into the NTZ etc. If the 'effective area' is zero then you really are just transferring effort. Some of the NTZ proposals for small rivers with shore fishing zones on both sides (I'm not sure if there are any like this in the proposals I have put up) would be more about trasnferring effort than spillover, however there would still be some buildup of fish that are protected by various structures that make them difficult to get at from the shore.
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