2019
DOI: 10.1002/eap.1981
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Herbivorous fish rise as a destructive fishing practice falls in an Indonesian marine national park

Abstract: Securing ecosystem functions is challenging, yet common priority in conservation efforts. While marine parks aim to meet this challenge by regulating fishing through zoning plans, their effectiveness hinges on compliance levels and may respond to changes in fishing practices. Here we use a speciose assemblage of nominally herbivorous reef fish in Karimunjawa National Park (zoned since 1989) to investigate whether areas subject to a restrictive management regime sustained higher biomass over seven years compare… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 99 publications
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“…For these fish, even when nonselective gears (e.g., nets, traps) are banned, more targeted controls on selective gears (e.g., spearguns) are also required especially in areas that are moderate to highly populated by people (Campbell et al., ; Cinner et al., ). For Indonesia, this finding implies that if MPAs are to elevate total biomass and ecosystem functioning above the levels of gear‐based management (McClanahan, Maina, Graham, & Jones, ), permanent closures require: (1) strengthening of customary or local co‐management institutions (Cinner et al., ), (2) stronger community compliance than has been shown to date (Bejarano, Pardede, Campbell, Hoey, & Ferse, ), (3) a demonstration that they confer equitable benefits to strengthen legitimacy and compliance (Glaser, Breckwoldt, Deswandi, Radjawali, & Ferse, ), and (4) be of sufficient size to protect home ranges of roaming fishery targets like piscivores (Green et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For these fish, even when nonselective gears (e.g., nets, traps) are banned, more targeted controls on selective gears (e.g., spearguns) are also required especially in areas that are moderate to highly populated by people (Campbell et al., ; Cinner et al., ). For Indonesia, this finding implies that if MPAs are to elevate total biomass and ecosystem functioning above the levels of gear‐based management (McClanahan, Maina, Graham, & Jones, ), permanent closures require: (1) strengthening of customary or local co‐management institutions (Cinner et al., ), (2) stronger community compliance than has been shown to date (Bejarano, Pardede, Campbell, Hoey, & Ferse, ), (3) a demonstration that they confer equitable benefits to strengthen legitimacy and compliance (Glaser, Breckwoldt, Deswandi, Radjawali, & Ferse, ), and (4) be of sufficient size to protect home ranges of roaming fishery targets like piscivores (Green et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since its establishment in 1985, management of Karimunjawa National Park has evolved in response to changing threats and feedback from scientific monitoring, as well as changing local and national government policy, and input from the community of 9000 people that live and work in the archipelago [18,23]. Management reviews have led to the park being rezoned twice.…”
Section: Threats and Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fishing pressure on Karimunjawa's reefs has traditionally been intense [15,23]. Seventy-percent of the community are involved in artisanal fishing [24], but the relative proximity of the island group to Java Island, home to more than 60% of the population of Indonesia, also poses a challenge for reef managers [21].…”
Section: Fishingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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