4.7 Article

Are we missing the boat? Current uses of long-term biological monitoring data in the evaluation and management of marine protected areas

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 149, Issue -, Pages 148-156

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.10.023

Keywords

Management effectiveness evaluation; Outcome assessment; Evidence-based management; Long-term monitoring; Conservation; Marine protected area

Funding

  1. University of Melbourne (HREC) [1238593.1]
  2. Australian Postgraduate Award Scholarship
  3. Parks Victoria's Research Partners Panel Program
  4. Joint Nature Conservation Committee (United Kingdom)
  5. National Environment Research Program, Marine Biodiversity Research Hub
  6. National Environment Research Program, Environmental Decisions Hub

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Protected area management agencies are increasingly using management effectiveness evaluation (MEE) to better understand, learn from and improve conservation efforts around the globe. Outcome assessment is the final stage of MEE, where conservation outcomes are measured to determine whether management objectives are being achieved. When quantitative monitoring data are available, best-practice examples of outcome assessments demonstrate that data should be assessed against quantitative condition categories. Such assessments enable more transparent and repeatable integration of monitoring data into MEE, which can promote evidence-based management and improve public accountability and reporting. We interviewed key informants from marine protected area (MPA) management agencies to investigate how scientific data sources, especially long-term biological monitoring data, are currently informing conservation management. Our study revealed that even when long-term monitoring results are available, management agencies are not using them for quantitative condition assessment in MEE. Instead, many agencies conduct qualitative condition assessments, where monitoring results are interpreted using expert judgment only. Whilst we found substantial evidence for the use of long-term monitoring data in the evidence-based management of MPAs, MEE is rarely the sole mechanism that facilitates the knowledge transfer of scientific evidence to management action. This suggests that the first goal of MEE (to enable environmental accountability and reporting) is being achieved, but the second and arguably more important goal of facilitating evidence-based management is not. Given that many MEE approaches are in their infancy, recommendations are made to assist management agencies realize the full potential of long-term quantitative monitoring data for protected area evaluation and evidence-based management. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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