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Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool (Read 120528 times)
pjb05
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #360 - Jun 1st, 2009 at 8:59am
 
Quote:
Didn't you read what I just said? They loooked at existing marine parks - your the one engaged in pointless theorising.


Are you suggesting that the evidence supports your claim that marine aprks are harmful? Did you bother to check the evidence? Everytime I have seen evidence presented by anti-marine park agitators it turns out to be complete BS. The closest thing I have seen was a study where the evidence against marine parks was based on only a couple of tagged and recaught fish.

Then I take it you haven't read or forgotten the Buxton and Parrish papers I have put up.

Quote:
You keep forgetting that the ground inside the reserves are lost to fishermen and that any spillover is extremely unlikely to make up for them as these papers explain
.

Yes, it sounds very heavy on baseless theorising and very light on actual evidence.

You have the juvenile habit of turning the argument around and throwing it back - without anything to back it up except the dubious consensus statement. Serious reviews by scientist who haven't prostituted themselve to Pew have concluded that the merits of marine parks as a fisheries management tool are theoretical and not proven in practice. Many go further to say they are likely to be an inferior fisheries management tool. You are ignoring the burden of proof for such a radical policy which is there must be a good chance that the policy might actually work!

Quote:
I think you find you did.


Quote me.

Look at you article on marine parks as 'the ideal fisheries management tool.

[ Quote:
You avoided my question - where are the existing marine parks which have benefitted fishermen?


Just about all of them have PJ. Hence the consensus statement. Do you want me to link you to a map or something?

Rubbish. And for a start the consensus statement pre-dates a lot of Australian marine parks. Why is it so hard for you to point to an Australian example where fishermen have benefited?

Quote:
How often have you fished off the shore FD? I don't find it hard to catch a fish this way. Overcrowding is the main obstacle - which you will make worse.


PJ, overcrowding will only get worse if people start catching more fish. This is a good thing.

Thats a big if.

Quote:
You will have to go further out to sea


No you won't PJ. Don't be silly.

You Newcastle example bans boat fishing close to shore does it not.  

Quote:
You have also avoided my point that a lot of the shore based spots in your examples are difficult and or dangerous to fish.


I did not ignore it. I pointed out that your claim is wrong. If there is a specific spot you think is dangerous, point it out. No-one is going to be forced to fish from dangerous locations.

What about the Newcastle example - you want to encourage people to fish off the ocean rocks. What about all you fishing allowed zones consisting of river breakwalls with very strong tidal flow (and difficult access for people with limited mobility).

Quote:
Im sorry the real world is complex FD. Yes, you can have both cases and this just goes to show the limits of management that over relies on marine reserves. Your theoretical musings don't take into account whether this form of management is as effective, cost effective or equitable than a combination of other methods. Do you deny that if a fish species is highly mobile then the protection given by marine reserves is limited?


PJ, this is a strawman argument. I have pointed out your error many times before, so I'm not sure why you keep repeating it. No-one is suggesting that marine parks replace all other management tools, or even a single one. Nor has this happened anywhere in the world. Let's stick to reality OK?

Yes but you are saying that they are the ideal management tool. And they represent a radical and costly impact on the resource stakeholders - doing as they do locking up large areas of the ocean. You are ignoring the burdens of proof and the basics of sound resource management.
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #361 - Jun 2nd, 2009 at 10:35pm
 
Quote:
I remember it very well actually.


That's funny. Before you were explaining how you couldn't be expected to remember it. So what did the student actually say?

Quote:
I would also think that if he admitted the evidence is still not in then there is a good chance that this because it is not there to find!


It's pretty naive to assume it is not there because a guy who sent a letter to the editor of a fishing mag thought the jury was still out. Plus there's the fact that you appear to have misinterpretted it.

Quote:
Hence 'unlikely to benefit' is a fair interpretation (and almost word for word with Ray Hilborn's remarks by the way).


No it is not. It is substituting what was actually written for your own little fairytale version.

Quote:
PS are you really that thick? I just offered 3 examples. You acknowledged two of them, now forgotten one and ignored Ray Hilborn's comments!


Is Ray a marine park advocate?

Quote:
6 of the 15 composers of the statement were Pew Fellows. When did I ever say all of them? Furthermore 25 of the 161 signatories were also Pew Fellows. Do you really think this a just a coincidence?


Only 25 eh? Sounds like a conspiracy to me.... You are clutching at straws with that line of argument.

Quote:
You have the juvenile habit of turning the argument around and throwing it back - without anything to back it up except the dubious consensus statement.


There is plenty to back it up.

Quote:
Serious reviews by scientist who haven't prostituted themselve to Pew have concluded that the merits of marine parks as a fisheries management tool are theoretical and not proven in practice.


In other words, you reject the vast majority of scientists because you don't want to accept the science, then accept the minority view without turning a critical eye on it.

Quote:
Quote me.

Look at you article on marine parks as 'the ideal fisheries management tool.


Like I said, quote me. You have a habit of misunderstanding what other people post. I am not gioing to try and guess which bit you misunderstood. That is why quoting people is so handy. Instead of spending five pages asking you about it, we could clear up your confusion in a post or two. You seem to cltuch onto your confusions like your life depends on them.

Quote:
Rubbish. And for a start the consensus statement pre-dates a lot of Australian marine parks. Why is it so hard for you to point to an Australian example where fishermen have benefited?


Before I get onto this, can I just confirm your implication that you accept that the evidence from around the world supports marine parks?

Quote:
PJ, overcrowding will only get worse if people start catching more fish. This is a good thing.

Thats a big if.


You're the one who seemed to think that overcrowding was a forgone conlusion. Now that I point out that it is a good thing, you aren;t so sure about it are you?

Quote:
You Newcastle example bans boat fishing close to shore does it not.
 

No. There are plenty of places to fish adjacent to the shore in that example. I don't think there are any boat ramps within the no take zone, so no fishermen would be forced to travel further away. I'm not sure why you get hung up on this anwyay. The distace across the no take zone is small compared to the distance I used to travel up and down the coast in that area to get to good spots. The marine park is also adjacent to one of the most heavily fished stretches of coastline, due to the high population within walking distance.

Quote:
What about the Newcastle example - you want to encourage people to fish off the ocean rocks.


OK, there are some headlands included in that area. I always thought of them as pretty tame, but I guess it depends on the conditions. In any case, shore based fishermen are not restricted to the rocks. There is a significant stretch of easily accessible coastline, including beaches. There is nothing about the proposal that encourages people to target the dangerous locations. I don't think it is necessary to ban rock fishing in those locations, or to try to move the no take zones away from the shore so they are not adjacent to any rocks. I am sure the rock fishermen would appreciate being able to fish on the edge of a marine park. I am certainly not going to tell them that they cannot get as much benefit from marine parks because I disapprove of their choices.

Quote:
Yes but you are saying that they are the ideal management tool.


Close, but not quite. What I say in no way implies that marine parks should be used in isolation. This is why I encourage you to quote people PJ. You have a habit of misunderstanding them. Even when it comes to my own writing, I don't think it is fair for me to have to go and find it to figure out what you misunderstood. There have been a few people tell you that you are wasting your time in this thread and that it just keeps going on and on and getting nowhere. Most of this time wasting is down to you misunderstanding what you read, then posting your own version here, and expecting everyone to simply take your word for it, despite the consistency with which you get it wrong.

[quote]And they represent a radical and costly impact on the resource stakeholders

True, there is a lot of whinging, but I don't see them as any worse than other management tools. It's just down to the fact that people are accustomed to some management tools and not others
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #362 - Jun 3rd, 2009 at 8:21am
 
Quote:
I remember it very well actually.


That's funny. Before you were explaining how you couldn't be expected to remember it. So what did the student actually say?

Duh, try not to be so thick FD - I said I had trouble finding the quote - not trouble remembering./i]

Quote:
I would also think that if he admitted the evidence is still not in then there is a good chance that this because it is not there to find!


It's pretty naive to assume it is not there because a guy who sent a letter to the editor of a fishing mag thought the jury was still out. Plus there's the fact that you appear to have misinterpretted it.

[i]Yes it would be - but what about all the papers from senior fisheries scientists I have put up?


Quote:
Hence 'unlikely to benefit' is a fair interpretation (and almost word for word with Ray Hilborn's remarks by the way).


No it is not. It is substituting what was actually written for your own little fairytale version.

Come off it, the guy was fervently in favour of marine parks - don't you think if he could get away with claiming a spillover effect resulting in better fishing he would - especially when writing to a fishing magazine?    

Quote:
PS are you really that thick? I just offered 3 examples. You acknowledged two of them, now forgotten one and ignored Ray Hilborn's comments!


Is Ray a marine park advocate?

At the time of writing he said they might be a good idea.

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« Last Edit: Jun 3rd, 2009 at 5:35pm by pjb05 »  
 
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #363 - Jun 3rd, 2009 at 8:44am
 
[ Quote:
6 of the 15 composers of the statement were Pew Fellows. When did I ever say all of them? Furthermore 25 of the 161 signatories were also Pew Fellows. Do you really think this a just a coincidence?


Only 25 eh? Sounds like a conspiracy to me.... You are clutching at straws with that line of argument.

Yes 25 of only 161 signatories, and nearly half the actual composers. That's a heavily stacked group. And thats without going further into the background of the signatories. I wonder how many are actual fisheries biologists with real world knowledge of fisheries?

PS - you whine about so called misquoting when you do it all the time - where have I said that ALL of the signatories or ALL of the composers were Pew fellows?


Quote:
You have the juvenile habit of turning the argument around and throwing it back - without anything to back it up except the dubious consensus statement.


There is plenty to back it up.

Quote:
Serious reviews by scientist who haven't prostituted themselve to Pew have concluded that the merits of marine parks as a fisheries management tool are theoretical and not proven in practice.


In other words, you reject the vast majority of scientists because you don't want to accept the science, then accept the minority view without turning a critical eye on it.

You have no evidence that the 'vast majority' of scientists support you claims. Anyway science is judged of the quality of the theories and how well they match the observation of nature - not some sort of post office method relying on the weight of papers!

Quote:
Quote me.

Look at you article on marine parks as 'the ideal fisheries management tool.


Like I said, quote me. You have a habit of misunderstanding what other people post. I am not gioing to try and guess which bit you misunderstood. That is why quoting people is so handy. Instead of spending five pages asking you about it, we could clear up your confusion in a post or two. You seem to cltuch onto your confusions like your life depends on them.

You should know your own article. If you not happy with me refering to it why don't you just tell me? You have just had this same argument with Grendel where you have taken the other side of this!

Quote:
Rubbish. And for a start the consensus statement pre-dates a lot of Australian marine parks. Why is it so hard for you to point to an Australian example where fishermen have benefited?


Before I get onto this, can I just confirm your implication that you accept that the evidence from around the world supports marine parks?

I didn't say that at all! You delusionally try to twist everthing into you faith based mantra.

Quote:
PJ, overcrowding will only get worse if people start catching more fish. This is a good thing.

Thats a big if.


You're the one who seemed to think that overcrowding was a forgone conlusion. Now that I point out that it is a good thing, you aren;t so sure about it are you?

Well either fishing pressure is displaced - hence more crowding in the areas not grabbed as green zones - or people give up fishing! Crowding does distract from the enjoyment of the sport - especially when shore based. In any case for a number of reasons your claims of better catches are highly dubious, yet you treat them as they are an actual fact.

Even if you take your dubious claims as true - all you are offering for fishermen is a zero sum game. Your restricting boat based fishermen to favour shore based fishermen - an entirely pointless exercise. Why on earth do you think you are doing fishermen any good in doing this?


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« Last Edit: Jun 3rd, 2009 at 11:58am by pjb05 »  
 
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #364 - Jun 5th, 2009 at 11:39am
 
Well if three examples is not enough here's another of a marine park advocate contradicting FD's claims of increased fisheries productivity resulting from marine parks. From Prof Kearney's review of the torn blue fringe:


To state that “any reduction in fished areas due to the establishment of marine protected areas must also be accompanied by a corresponding reduction in overall fishing effort” demonstrates a most worrying disregard for, or perhaps ignorance of, the fundamental principles of resource conservation and allocation that must underpin ESD. By calling for a reduction in fishing effort, regardless of the impact this might have on subsequent levels of catch, and in the absence of properly identified problems with fishing, this indicates antagonism towards fishing, i.e. the act of people fishing, and not just identified ecological problems associated with fishing. This negative predisposition to fishing appears to dominate the
attitudes that pervade much of the document. One of the basic tenets of the benefits of area closures is that they will benefit the overall stock and biodiversity in general: Winn (2008) itself contains numerous statements claiming that fisheries will benefit from having sanctuary zones (e.g. on page 34). If sanctuaries do actually benefit stocks in total, and not just those inside the sanctuary, then total catches are supposed to go up, not down. Therefore, if the goal is the social one of conserving and sharing resources, as is the case for most management of recreational fisheries, and not the economic one of increasing catch per unit effort, a sustainable increase in effort should be one of the anticipated outcomes. It must also not be assumed that fisheries will benefit from having sanctuary, no-take
zones: in Tasmania for example, it has been shown that this is demonstrably not the case (Buxton et al. 2004).
Further, a reduction in fishing effort is not necessarily consistent with maintaining an optimal ecologically sustainable total catch, nor can it be assumed that fishing always reduces biodiversity.
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« Last Edit: Jun 5th, 2009 at 3:16pm by pjb05 »  
 
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #365 - Jun 5th, 2009 at 3:20pm
 
Getting back to the scientific literature here's some more on the subject of marine parks for fisheries management. From a sumission regarding NZ marine parks:

Literature reviews
We draw your attention to a recent study undertaken by the Australian Bureau of Rural Sciences and CSIRO 2 . The authors of this study undertook an extensive review of the international scientific literature on the effectiveness of marine reserves for fisheries management purposes. The review focuses on the effectiveness of marine sanctuaries/no-take areas that have been established specifically for fisheries management purposes, documenting potential and realised benefits for fisheries.


The authors note that there are few well documented examples of no-take reserves being used as part of fisheries management. While there is reasonable evidence of benefits inside reserves (eg., increase in fish abundance) in the literature, there is virtually no empirical evidence for the key benefits outside reserves (spillover, larval export, stability of fisheries production). Further, the majority of studies into fish abundance concentrate on large coral reef predatory fish, which are the most targeted species in tropical fisheries and the most severely affected by fishing (because of their slow growth rate, low reproductive rate and territorial behaviour). Much less is known about the effect of marine reserves on other ecosystems (e.g. continental shelf, open oceans).


The study referred to above also notes that experiences of tangible fisheries benefits outside marine reserves are often limited to either the recovery of highly depleted stocks or to subsistence-scale tropical reef fisheries under little formal management. There is little documented evidence that no-take reserves improve fisheries yield in fisheries already under tight management controls such as those imposed by New Zealand’s Quota Management System. The study also notes that marine reserves have the potential to significantly reduce net benefits for commercial fisheries and concludes that “there are no well-documented examples where marine fishery sanctuaries have been shown to provide and maintain net economic benefits for previously existing fisheries” (Ward et al. 2001 [2]). This is an increasing concern if large reserves in both inshore and offshore areas are to be created.


The authors conclude that it is difficult to assess whether no-take marine reserves are useful tools for fisheries management because there are few such reserves worldwide. At present, much of the evidence of fisheries benefits that is used to promote marine reserves for fisheries management purposes is largely theoretical and circumstantial.

As Holland (2002) notes, there are serious limitations to our ability to address these issues with empirical research. Doing so rigorously would require a number of replications over long periods with comparisons to controls, and even then might only provide conclusions valid for very specific sets of circumstances. The full impacts of reserves can take many years to be realised and will be confounded by environmental and
regulatory changes.


Modelling studies provide an alternative approach to evaluate basic questions about how reserves of various designs in various environments might affect fisheries. Several published modelling studies of marine reserves and closed areas for fisheries suggest that a correctly sized marine reserve may increase yields in fisheries that are subject to growth or recruitment overfishing, but that little if any yield increases can be achieved in fisheries where effort is already at the level that produces maximum sustainable yield or maximum yield per recruit (e.g., Beverton and Holt 1957, Guénette and Pitcher 1999, Hannesson 1998 and 2002, Hastings and Botsford 1999, Holland and Brazee 1996, Nowlis and Roberts 1999, Polacheck 1990, Rodwell et al. 2002, Sanchirico and Wilen 1998, 1999 and 2002, Smith and Wilen 2003).
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #366 - Jun 8th, 2009 at 7:50pm
 
Quote:
   
From ABC, 8 Jun. 09
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/06/08/2592196.htm?section=justin

JELLYFISH THREATEN TO 'DOMINATE' OCEANS
By Anna Salleh for ABC Science Online

Giant jellyfish are taking over parts of the world's oceans due to overfishing and other human activities, researchers say.
Nomura jellyfish are the biggest in the world and can grow as big as a sumo wrestler. They weigh up to 200 kilograms and can reach 2 metres in diameter.
Dr Anthony Richardson and his colleagues from CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research says jellyfish numbers are increasing, particularly in South East Asia, the Black Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea.
"We need to take management action to avert the marine systems of the world flipping over to being jellyfish dominated," says Dr Richardson, who is also a marine biologist at the University of Queensland.
He says the Japanese have a real problem with giant jellyfish that burst through fishing nets.
He says other researchers are experimenting with different ways of controlling jellyfish, including using sound waves to explode jellyfish and using special nets to try and cut them up.

OVERFISHING
Dr Richardson and his colleagues reviewed literature linking jellyfish blooms with overfishing and eutrophication (high levels of nutrients).
Jellyfish are normally kept in check by fish, which eat small jellyfish and compete for jellyfish food such as zooplankton, he says.
But with overfishing, jellyfish numbers are increasing. Jellyfish feed on fish eggs and larvae, further impacting on fish numbers.
To add insult to injury, nitrogen and phosphorous in run-off cause red phytoplankton blooms, which create low-oxygen dead zones where jellyfish survive, but fish cannot.
"You can think of them like a protected area for jellyfish," Dr Richardson says.
The researchers say climate change may also encourage more jellyfish and they have postulated for the first time that these conditions can lead to what they call a "jellyfish stable state", in which jellyfish rule the oceans.
TAKING ACTION
The team recommends a number of actions in its paper, published in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution and released to coincide with World Oceans Day.
They say it is important to reduce overfishing, especially of small pelagic fish like sardines, and to reduce run-off.
They also say it is important to control the transport of jellyfish around the world in ballast water and aquariums.
Jellyfish are considered simple jelly-like sea animals, which are related to the microscopic animals that form coral.
They generally start their life as a plant-like polyp on the sea bed before budding off into the well-known bell-shaped medusa.
Jellyfish have tentacles containing pneumatocyst cells, which act like little harpoons that lodge in prey to sting and kill them.
The location and number of pneumatocysts dictate whether jellyfish are processed for human consumption.
While dried jellyfish with soya sauce is a delicacy served in Chinese weddings and banquets, not all kinds of jellyfish can be eaten, Dr Richardson says.
According to Dr Richardson, the species increasing in number are not generally eaten.


Just came past this article, and although giant jellyfish not edible, looks that sooner or later some kind of jellyfish will come to our table.
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #367 - Jun 8th, 2009 at 10:11pm
 
PJ, I checked out the Buxton paper here:

http://eprints.utas.edu.au/1644/1/FRDC_Final_Report_Internet.pdf

It makes the same point I do about the importance of marine park size, albeit indirectly. I also noticed that he talked about the comparing the exclusive use of marine parks with combinations of other methods. I guess that is where you got that crazy idea from. It seems like a strange comparison to make, but I guess the limitations of his model necessitiated a very simple comparison. Apart from that, it appears to make a lot of assumptions, and contrary to what you and Bob Kearney appear to claim, did not actually measure the impact on catches. I also found it interesting that despite being critical of them, the author still supports them.

He also makes this claim:

Quote:
An increase in biomass within an MPA is of no value to a fishery if there
has been a greater loss of biomass outside the MPA through effort displacement.


Yet increases in biomass outside of marine park boundaries have also been clearly demonstrated.

Quote:
Yes it would be - but what about all the papers from senior fisheries scientists I have put up?


Are they marine park advocates? Remember, this is the absurd claim I pulled you up on:

Quote:
Even marine parks advocates in their more honest moments say that fishermen are unlikely to benifit.


Are you saying that all the scientists you try to use to back your case up all support marine parks?

Quote:
Come off it, the guy was fervently in favour of marine parks - don't you think if he could get away with claiming a spillover effect resulting in better fishing he would - especially when writing to a fishing magazine?


You are stretching an extremely long bow here. You are going from a single marine park advocate, of unknown origin, not making a positive claim to suggesting that marine park advocates in general would makle a negative claim if they were honest. I am just pointing out your tendency to make absurd claims in the apparent belief that you have evidence to back them up.

Quote:
You have no evidence that the 'vast majority' of scientists support you claims.


Sure I do. With minimal effort I can dig up a statement signed by over a hundred of them. You have to scratch around to find the odd individual, and you don't seem to have any actual evidence that marine parks are actually harmful as you claim. Fisheries managers have not been somehow tricked into thinking the scientific community backs marine parks.

Quote:
You should know your own article. If you not happy with me refering to it why don't you just tell me?


I am more than happy for you to refer to it. That is why I keep telling you to quote me rather than putting words in my mouth. A vague reference to something you probably misunderstood is not useful. That is what I have the problem with.

Quote:
I didn't say that at all! You delusionally try to twist everthing into you faith based mantra.


I'm just interested in why you would ask for specifically Australian evidence. I have lost count of the number of times I have heard a fishermen ask for evidence, then complain that the evidence wasn't from Australia, or wasn't from NSW, or wasn't from Nelson Bay, or wasn't from his particular favourite fishing spot. It's just a silly game of shifting the goal posts. Also, it seemed a strange request from someone who also seems to think the evidence from overseas is in their favour.

Quote:
Well either fishing pressure is displaced - hence more crowding in the areas not grabbed as green zones - or people give up fishing!


None of my proposals ban fishing from easily accessible shore based fishing spots, so they are not going to get more crowded that way. They will also improve fishing for boat fishermen as well. The only way it could make the shore based spots more crowded is if fishing significantly improves there, and fewer people feel the need to get a boat to catch a feed. This is a good thing. They are not prevented from obtaining or using a boat, it's just that their choices improve.

Quote:
Crowding does distract from the enjoyment of the sport


So get a boat then, if that's how you feel. I'm not sure what is so difficult with this concept. No-one is out to force you to fish from the shore. Not me anyway.

Quote:
Even if you take your dubious claims as true - all you are offering for fishermen is a zero sum game.


You seem to have no idea what I am claiming then. Which is why I suggest you quote me, rather than putting words into my mouth.

Quote:
Your restricting boat based fishermen to favour shore based fishermen - an entirely pointless exercise.


Even if that were the extent of it, it is not pointless.

Quote:
Well if three examples is not enough here's another of a marine park advocate contradicting FD's claims of increased fisheries productivity resulting from marine parks. From Prof Kearney's review of the torn blue fringe:


So Bob Kearney is a marine park advocate as well now?

Quote:
Getting back to the scientific literature here's some more on the subject of marine parks for fisheries management. From a sumission regarding NZ marine parks:


You forgot the link again PJ.
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #368 - Jun 8th, 2009 at 10:14pm
 
Quote:
This is an increasing concern if large reserves in both inshore and offshore areas are to be created.


There is that point about reserve size again PJ. It seems to keep popping up, even in the references you give. But you knew that my article deals with this issue specifically, didn't you?

Quote:
As Holland (2002) notes, there are serious limitations to our ability to address these issues with empirical research. Doing so rigorously would require a number of replications over long periods with comparisons to controls, and even then might only provide conclusions valid for very specific sets of circumstances. The full impacts of reserves can take many years to be realised and will be confounded by environmental and regulatory changes.


I believe that may answer some of your other questions. Just stating the obvious here of course. It is the same reason why it is so hard to get close to the maximum sustainable yield with traditional methods.

Quote:
Modelling studies provide an alternative approach to evaluate basic questions about how reserves of various designs in various environments might affect fisheries. Several published modelling studies of marine reserves and closed areas for fisheries suggest that a correctly sized marine reserve may increase yields in fisheries that are subject to growth or recruitment overfishing, but that little if any yield increases can be achieved in fisheries where effort is already at the level that produces maximum sustainable yield or maximum yield per recruit (e.g., Beverton and Holt 1957, Guénette and Pitcher 1999, Hannesson 1998 and 2002, Hastings and Botsford 1999, Holland and Brazee 1996, Nowlis and Roberts 1999, Polacheck 1990, Rodwell et al. 2002, Sanchirico and Wilen 1998, 1999 and 2002, Smith and Wilen 2003).


There is that same point about reserve size again for you PJ. You should read that paragraph carefully, and try to point out to me the situations where it says that marine parks will reduce yield. It basically says there are big benefits from marine parks compared to bad management, and small benefits compared to theoretically perfect management with other tools.


Happy - interesting article. I tried jellyfish while I was in China. I wasn't very imrpessed.
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #369 - Jun 9th, 2009 at 6:28pm
 
] Quote:
This is an increasing concern if large reserves in both inshore and offshore areas are to be created.


There is that point about reserve size again PJ. It seems to keep popping up, even in the references you give. But you knew that my article deals with this issue specifically, didn't you?

Quote:
As Holland (2002) notes, there are serious limitations to our ability to address these issues with empirical research. Doing so rigorously would require a number of replications over long periods with comparisons to controls, and even then might only provide conclusions valid for very specific sets of circumstances. The full impacts of reserves can take many years to be realised and will be confounded by environmental and regulatory changes.


I believe that may answer some of your other questions. Just stating the obvious here of course. It is the same reason why it is so hard to get close to the maximum sustainable yield with traditional methods.

No actually it's the reason it is hard to claim reserve benifits with any certainty.

Quote:
Modelling studies provide an alternative approach to evaluate basic questions about how reserves of various designs in various environments might affect fisheries. Several published modelling studies of marine reserves and closed areas for fisheries suggest that a correctly sized marine reserve may increase yields in fisheries that are subject to growth or recruitment overfishing, but that little if any yield increases can be achieved in fisheries where effort is already at the level that produces maximum sustainable yield or maximum yield per recruit (e.g., Beverton and Holt 1957, Guénette and Pitcher 1999, Hannesson 1998 and 2002, Hastings and Botsford 1999, Holland and Brazee 1996, Nowlis and Roberts 1999, Polacheck 1990, Rodwell et al. 2002, Sanchirico and Wilen 1998, 1999 and 2002, Smith and Wilen 2003).


There is that same point about reserve size again for you PJ. You should read that paragraph carefully, and try to point out to me the situations where it says that marine parks will reduce yield. It basically says there are big benefits from marine parks compared to bad management, and small benefits compared to theoretically perfect management with other tools.

Duh FD. If a stock is growth overfished then by definition any significant restriction of the fishing effort will give a better yield. It doesn't say at all there are 'big benifits' resulting from marine park management. Your interpretation is at odds with their conclusion that traditional methods, properly applied, are the best way forward. 

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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #370 - Jun 9th, 2009 at 6:58pm
 
PJ, I checked out the Buxton paper here:

http://eprints.utas.edu.au/1644/1/FRDC_Final_Report_Internet.pdf


He also makes this claim:

Quote:
An increase in biomass within an MPA is of no value to a fishery if there has been a greater loss of biomass outside the MPA through effort displacement.


Yet increases in biomass outside of marine park boundaries have also been clearly demonstrated.

Only in overfished fisheries where any significant change in management would give an improvement.

Quote:
Yes it would be - but what about all the papers from senior fisheries scientists I have put up?


Are they marine park advocates? Remember, this is the absurd claim I pulled you up on:

Quote:
Even marine parks advocates in their more honest moments say that fishermen are unlikely to benifit.


They are two different cases. Stop trying to muddle the two.

Are you saying that all the scientists you try to use to back your case up all support marine parks?

I don't recall saying that. I am saying they are professional and haven't crossed the line to advocacy like so many promoting marine parks.

Quote:
Come off it, the guy was fervently in favour of marine parks - don't you think if he could get away with claiming a spillover effect resulting in better fishing he would - especially when writing to a fishing magazine?


You are stretching an extremely long bow here. You are going from a single marine park advocate, of unknown origin, not making a positive claim to suggesting that marine park advocates in general would makle a negative claim if they were honest. I am just pointing out your tendency to make absurd claims in the apparent belief that you have evidence to back them up.

I'm up to four marine park advocates now. Remember I just quoted the NPA's Torn Blue Fringe. You just harp on one because you know I'm not going to search for it through a pile of old fishing magazines.

I can add two more now. In July's Fishing World Magazine Andy Davis (Associate Prof Biological Sciences University of Wollongong) and Associate Prof Greg Skilleter (School of Biologcal Sciences University of Qld) take the Editor to task for suggesting that marine parks are for fisheries management! To quote: "Marine park green zones are not there to improve fisheries or stop fishing". "Why do fishers think marine parks are about them?" "Green sanctuary zones are there to provide a few patches of this planet where biodiversity is protected from all sources of human activity (or at least far as possible.."


Quote:
You have no evidence that the 'vast majority' of scientists support you claims.


Sure I do. With minimal effort I can dig up a statement signed by over a hundred of them. You have to scratch around to find the odd individual, and you don't seem to have any actual evidence that marine parks are actually harmful as you claim. Fisheries managers have not been somehow tricked into thinking the scientific community backs marine parks.

A hundred out of the 10's of thousands of scientists is not a majority! It is not even representative considering the statement is so heavily stacked with Pew fellows. Of course you have it at your fingertips, you are too lazy and incompetent to carry out any critical, in depth assessment of the issue.  

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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #371 - Jun 9th, 2009 at 7:48pm
 
Quote:
They are two different cases. Stop trying to muddle the two.


Actually, if you follow the discussion back, you will see it was a follow on from your claim about what marine park advocates 'would say if they were being honest'.

Quote:
I can add two more now. In July's Fishing World Magazine Andy Davis (Assosiate Prof Biological Sciences University of Wollongong) and Associate Prof Greg Skilleter (School of Biologcal Sciences University of Qld) take the Editor to task for suggesting that marine parks are for fisheries management! To quote: "Marine park green zones are not there to improve fisheries or stop fishing". "Why do fishers think marine parks are about them?" "Green sanctuary zones are there to provide a few patches of this planet where biodiversity is protected from all sources of human activity (or at least far as possible.."


PJ, you seem to view the world with rose tinted glasses. You have an unfortunate tendency to interpret any ambiguity as being a statement in direct support of you. That quote does not say that they will be harmful to fishermen. Furthermore, in response to the question it raises, what threats to marine biodiversity do you think marine parks directly address? Is it runoff? Pollution? Climate change? Or is it fishing?

You still haven't been able to quote the student. And the scientists from whose statements you infer your generalised claim made specific statements about marine parks that were poorly implemented from a fisheries management perspective. If an advocate of minimum sizes were to say something obvious, like poorly chosen minimum sizes will reduce total yields, would you go on to infer generally that advocates of minimum sizes will, if honest, admit that they are harmful to a fishery? Or would that be a completely inappropriate conclusion to draw?
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #372 - Jun 9th, 2009 at 8:55pm
 
Quote:
I can add two more now. In July's Fishing World Magazine Andy Davis (Assosiate Prof Biological Sciences University of Wollongong) and Associate Prof Greg Skilleter (School of Biologcal Sciences University of Qld) take the Editor to task for suggesting that marine parks are for fisheries management! To quote: "Marine park green zones are not there to improve fisheries or stop fishing". "Why do fishers think marine parks are about them?" "Green sanctuary zones are there to provide a few patches of this planet where biodiversity is protected from all sources of human activity (or at least far as possible.."


PJ, you seem to view the world with rose tinted glasses. You have an unfortunate tendency to interpret any ambiguity as being a statement in direct support of you. That quote does not say that they will be harmful to fishermen. Furthermore, in response to the question it raises, what threats to marine biodiversity do you think marine parks directly address? Is it runoff? Pollution? Climate change? Or is it fishing?

Well obviously all marine park green zones do is ban fishing. And it can't be assumed that fishing threatens biodiversity or marine parks will improve biodiversity. The quotes say marine parks are not there to manage fisheries, which is light years away from your position of them being the ideal fisheries management tool.

You still haven't been able to quote the student. And the scientists from whose statements you infer your generalised claim made specific statements about marine parks that were poorly implemented from a fisheries management perspective. If an advocate of minimum sizes were to say something obvious, like poorly chosen minimum sizes will reduce total yields, would you go on to infer generally that advocates of minimum sizes will, if honest, admit that they are harmful to a fishery? Or would that be a completely inappropriate conclusion to draw?

I have quoted the student - from memory. I have told you I'm not going to search through the last few years of fishing magazines to find the letter - get over it!

PS: So you are admitting that Australian marine parks are poorly designed from a fisheries management point of view? Are there any well designed ones? How do you plans differ where these have failed?

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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #373 - Jun 10th, 2009 at 7:16pm
 
Quote:
And it can't be assumed that fishing threatens biodiversity or marine parks will improve biodiversity.


'Threatens' biodiversity is not really the correct phrase. Fishing does tend to reduce biodiversity significantly. The increase in biodiversity from marine parks is not assumed, but is well documented from observation. You seem to keep switching between arguing only on the issue of fishery benefit, to arguing on the issue of biodiversity benefit.

Quote:
The quotes say marine parks are not there to manage fisheries, which is light years away from your position of them being the ideal fisheries management tool.


Actually it doesn't contradict that claim either. The guy is just expressing a different view on their purpose, which does not necessarily imply a different view of their outcome. Why would you use a claim that is clearly false, or at best misleading, to back up your argument?

Quote:
I have quoted the student - from memory.


OK then, what you claim the student said did not back up your original claim either. What the student actually said is likely to be even further from your misrepresentation.

Quote:
PS: So you are admitting that Australian marine parks are poorly designed from a fisheries management point of view?


Some are. That is the point of my article PJ.

Quote:
Are there any well designed ones? How do you plans differ where these have failed?


Some are, to varying degrees. The important differences are that I propose keeping the no take zone as small as possible, while still being functional, excluding land based anglers from restrictions, and placing marine parks in the most heavily fished areas and/or adjacent to convenient land based fishing spots. It is usually fairly obvious from the map to what extent planners have adopted these guidelines.
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Re: Marine Parks as a Fisheries Management Tool
Reply #374 - Jun 13th, 2009 at 10:05am
 
] Quote:
And it can't be assumed that fishing threatens biodiversity or marine parks will improve biodiversity.


'Threatens' biodiversity is not really the correct phrase. Fishing does tend to reduce biodiversity significantly. The increase in biodiversity from marine parks is not assumed, but is well documented from observation. You seem to keep switching between arguing only on the issue of fishery benefit, to arguing on the issue of biodiversity benefit.

Profs Buxton and Kearney would appear to disagree. PS I'm not 'switching' marine parks are being advocated on both grounds.

Quote:
The quotes say marine parks are not there to manage fisheries, which is light years away from your position of them being the ideal fisheries management tool.


Actually it doesn't contradict that claim either. The guy is just expressing a different view on their purpose, which does not necessarily imply a different view of their outcome. Why would you use a claim that is clearly false, or at best misleading, to back up your argument?

The fact that he doesn't see them as a fisheries management tool and calls it 'misinformation' to call them that indeed implies a lot.
Quote:
I have quoted the student - from memory.


OK then, what you claim the student said did not back up your original claim either. What the student actually said is likely to be even further from your misrepresentation.

I does very much - why must you deny the obvious?

Quote:
PS: So you are admitting that Australian marine parks are poorly designed from a fisheries management point of view?


Some are. That is the point of my article PJ.

Which are the 'effective' ones then? Remember your proposals are theoretical along with the benefits you tout. Don't you know that a lot of the areas you describe are already recreational fishing havens. Where is you assessment that any of the fish close to shore are actually overfished. If any are and your claim is to benifit fishermen, where is your assessment that area closures will be of more benefit than more targetted measures?
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