4.5 Article

Benefits of collaboration between indigenous fishery management and data-driven spatial planning approaches: the case of a Polynesian traditional design (rahui)

Journal

FISHERIES RESEARCH
Volume 256, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fishres.2022.106475

Keywords

Raivavae; Systematic conservation planning; Marxan; Artisanal fisheries; Ciguatera; Locally managed marine area

Categories

Funding

  1. MANA (Management of Atolls) project [ANR-16-CE32-0004]
  2. PANGEA project (Delegation `a la Recherche de Polynesie francaise) [06575/MED]
  3. Sorbonne Universite

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Traditional fishery management schemes have gained recognition worldwide, but the changing environmental and socio-economic contexts require adjustments. This study examines a traditional system on a Polynesian island and suggests a hybrid design combining traditional practices and data-based optimizations.
Traditional fishery management schemes have gained increasing recognition worldwide. It can be explained by a better compliance to ancient cultural practices, still rooted in present-day coastal communities despite globalization and modern livelihoods. This revival is widespread and welcome by policy makers, scientists, and the communities themselves. However, current environmental and socio-economic contexts are often not conform to ancient-time situations. Baselines are different. Effective adjustments of traditional practices may be advocated. Re-establishment of traditional schemes 'as such' warrants further investigations and modern quantitative assessment and management approaches can help. A demonstration is provided here for a rural Polynesian island that faces declining marine resources. Recently, local fishers discussed the implementation of a traditional system (called ra over bar hui) to preserve the island lagoon resources, based on the rotational closure of an arbitrary 50% of each lagoon subdivision. Upon the fishers' request who questioned a traditional scheme that has not been applied for decades and seeked some scientific approval, we used systematic conservation planning (SCP) tools to explore potential optimisation pathways. All quantitative conservation objectives being equal, SCP suggested reserve sizes and opportunity costs on average 7 and 5 times lower than the traditional design. Traditional management federates communities and is strongly encouraged, but fishers are now aware that effective alternative designs are possible. A hybrid design mixing traditional practices and data-based optimizations is advocated. Similar findings and recommendations can be expected in other regions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available