Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis

This paper develops a dynamic computational bioeconomic model with the objective of assessing protected marine reserves as fisheries management tools. Data on the North East Atlantic cod stock are used to determine the bioeconomically optimal size of a marine reserve for the Barents Sea cod fishery,...

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Main Author: Sumaila, Ussif Rashid
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Chr. Michelsen Institute 2008
Subjects:
Cod
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2436099
id ftcmi:oai:open.cmi.no:11250/2436099
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spelling ftcmi:oai:open.cmi.no:11250/2436099 2023-05-15T15:27:36+02:00 Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis Sumaila, Ussif Rashid 2008-02-29T13:38:18Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2436099 eng eng Chr. Michelsen Institute CMI Working paper WP 1998: 3 urn:issn:0804-3639 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2436099 Fishery management Protected areas Marine resources Economic models Cod Working paper 2008 ftcmi 2021-10-19T09:16:51Z This paper develops a dynamic computational bioeconomic model with the objective of assessing protected marine reserves as fisheries management tools. Data on the North East Atlantic cod stock are used to determine the bioeconomically optimal size of a marine reserve for the Barents Sea cod fishery, as a function of the net transfer rate between the protected and unprotected areas of the marine habitat. The single agent model developed, allows for the occurrence of a shock to the system in the form of severe recruitment failure in the non-protected area. Two key results emerge from the study. First, establishment of marine reserves are bioeconomically beneficial when net transfer rates for cod are "reasonably" high and reserve sizes are large: Large reserves provide good protection for the stock in the face of the shock, while high transfer rates make the protected fish available for harvesting after the shock has occurred. Further, optimally chosen reserve size when net transfer rates are high, also mitigates against biological losses. Second, when net transfer rates are low, the establishment of marine reserves does not mitigate against losses in discounted economic rent, while they tend to be efficient in mitigating against biological losses. Report atlantic cod Barents Sea North East Atlantic CMI Open Research Archive (Chr. Michelsens Institutt) Barents Sea
institution Open Polar
collection CMI Open Research Archive (Chr. Michelsens Institutt)
op_collection_id ftcmi
language English
topic Fishery management
Protected areas
Marine resources
Economic models
Cod
spellingShingle Fishery management
Protected areas
Marine resources
Economic models
Cod
Sumaila, Ussif Rashid
Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
topic_facet Fishery management
Protected areas
Marine resources
Economic models
Cod
description This paper develops a dynamic computational bioeconomic model with the objective of assessing protected marine reserves as fisheries management tools. Data on the North East Atlantic cod stock are used to determine the bioeconomically optimal size of a marine reserve for the Barents Sea cod fishery, as a function of the net transfer rate between the protected and unprotected areas of the marine habitat. The single agent model developed, allows for the occurrence of a shock to the system in the form of severe recruitment failure in the non-protected area. Two key results emerge from the study. First, establishment of marine reserves are bioeconomically beneficial when net transfer rates for cod are "reasonably" high and reserve sizes are large: Large reserves provide good protection for the stock in the face of the shock, while high transfer rates make the protected fish available for harvesting after the shock has occurred. Further, optimally chosen reserve size when net transfer rates are high, also mitigates against biological losses. Second, when net transfer rates are low, the establishment of marine reserves does not mitigate against losses in discounted economic rent, while they tend to be efficient in mitigating against biological losses.
format Report
author Sumaila, Ussif Rashid
author_facet Sumaila, Ussif Rashid
author_sort Sumaila, Ussif Rashid
title Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
title_short Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
title_full Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
title_fullStr Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Protected Marine Reserves as Fisheries Management Tools: A Bioeconomic Analysis
title_sort protected marine reserves as fisheries management tools: a bioeconomic analysis
publisher Chr. Michelsen Institute
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2436099
geographic Barents Sea
geographic_facet Barents Sea
genre atlantic cod
Barents Sea
North East Atlantic
genre_facet atlantic cod
Barents Sea
North East Atlantic
op_relation CMI Working paper
WP 1998: 3
urn:issn:0804-3639
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2436099
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