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People Benefit from Conservation
Marine Managed Areas (MMAs) have become an increasingly popular tool to manage these valuable resources. Analysis of MMA experiences worldwide has found signficant human wellbeing benefits, including:
However, MMAs are not without their challenges, which include inequitable benefits, lost access to fishing groups, insufficient sustainable technical capacity and unmet expectations. To address these issues and ensure human wellbeing benefits, effective MMAs depend on key socioeconomic and governance conditions, including strong community leadership and organizations, alternative livelihood opportunities, the perception that benefits exceed costs, support of external institutions, accountable management and supportive local government.
These tools are used by conservation investors (e.g., non-government organizations, government, private sector) to shift resource users (e.g., local residents, fishermen, developers) from destructive to sustainable practices. Successful interventions appear to combine elements of all three approaches. Given that most marine conservation efforts involve the reduction of certain activities by resource users, other economic opportunities are needed to drive socioeconomic development, indicating that an alternative livelihoods component often must be part of overall strategy. The direct incentive offered by buyouts can produce a quick, measurable reduction in harvesting pressure, thereby addressing the principal threat to biodiversity and ecosystem values. Finally, the conservation agreement approach is built on a stream of benefits over time, such that the incentive for resource users to support conservation is sustained. |