Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach

Implementation of marine conservation measures has been slow in British Columbia, providing the motivation for initiating the British Columbia Marine Conservation Analysis (BCMCA) project. The purpose of the BCMCA project is to collaboratively identify areas of high conservation interest for the mar...

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Main Authors: Ban, Natalie, Royle, Krista, Short, Charlie, Davis, Neil, Bodtker, Karin, Bryan, Tanya, Cripps, Ken, Day, Andrew, Haggarty, Dana, Lee, Lynn, Manson, Murray, Nicolson, Dave, Rasmussen, Glen, Ladell, Kate Willis
Other Authors: Bondrup-Nielsen, S., Beazley, K., Bissix, G., Colville, D., Flemming, S., Herman, T., McPherson, M., Mockford, S., O'Grady, S.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: Science and Management of Protected Areas Association 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/1/2010_Ban_et_al_Identifying_priority_areas_for_marine_conservation_in_BC.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:15355 2023-09-05T13:19:28+02:00 Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach Ban, Natalie Royle, Krista Short, Charlie Davis, Neil Bodtker, Karin Bryan, Tanya Cripps, Ken Day, Andrew Haggarty, Dana Lee, Lynn Manson, Murray Nicolson, Dave Rasmussen, Glen Ladell, Kate Willis Bondrup-Nielsen, S. Beazley, K. Bissix, G. Colville, D. Flemming, S. Herman, T. McPherson, M. Mockford, S. O'Grady, S. 2010 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/1/2010_Ban_et_al_Identifying_priority_areas_for_marine_conservation_in_BC.pdf unknown Science and Management of Protected Areas Association http://www.sampaa.org/publications/conference-proceedings-1991-2000/sampaa-6-proceedings/system-planning/Ban%20et%20al%202010.pdf/view https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/1/2010_Ban_et_al_Identifying_priority_areas_for_marine_conservation_in_BC.pdf Ban, Natalie, Royle, Krista, Short, Charlie, Davis, Neil, Bodtker, Karin, Bryan, Tanya, Cripps, Ken, Day, Andrew, Haggarty, Dana, Lee, Lynn, Manson, Murray, Nicolson, Dave, Rasmussen, Glen, and Ladell, Kate Willis (2010) Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach. In: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference of Science and the Management of Protected Areas. pp. 251-262. From: Sixth International Conference of Science and the Management of Protected Areas, 21-26 May 2007, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada. restricted Conference Item PeerReviewed 2010 ftjamescook 2023-08-22T19:55:10Z Implementation of marine conservation measures has been slow in British Columbia, providing the motivation for initiating the British Columbia Marine Conservation Analysis (BCMCA) project. The purpose of the BCMCA project is to collaboratively identify areas of high conservation interest for the marine waters of British Columbia. The project team is comprised of representatives from academia, First Nations organizations, non-profit environmental groups, federal and provincial government agencies, and user groups. The BCMCA project is developing two products: 1) an atlas of known ecological and human use values; and 2) a series of Marxan spatial analyses. The atlas will map ecological data, human use data, areas where data are lacking, and a combination of areas of ecological value and more intensive human use. The Marxan spatial analyses will iteratively identify: 1) areas with high conservation value based on ecological data only; 2) areas of high conservation value that minimize overlap with areas important to human use; and 3) areas of high conservation value that incorporate additional marine reserve design considerations. To guide and inform the analysis, we held five ecological expert workshops focused on various ecosystem components, are engaging user groups, and have a workshop planned to refine analysis methods. The ecological workshops drew on the knowledge and expertise of resource managers, the conservation community, academics and First Nations, to help assemble and use the best available data – biological, ecological and oceanographic – in developing sound, defensible analysis methods and products. Results of the BCMCA project are intended to advance marine planning initiatives in British Columbia by collaboratively and iteratively identifying potential areas of high conservation value. Conference Object First Nations James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
institution Open Polar
collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description Implementation of marine conservation measures has been slow in British Columbia, providing the motivation for initiating the British Columbia Marine Conservation Analysis (BCMCA) project. The purpose of the BCMCA project is to collaboratively identify areas of high conservation interest for the marine waters of British Columbia. The project team is comprised of representatives from academia, First Nations organizations, non-profit environmental groups, federal and provincial government agencies, and user groups. The BCMCA project is developing two products: 1) an atlas of known ecological and human use values; and 2) a series of Marxan spatial analyses. The atlas will map ecological data, human use data, areas where data are lacking, and a combination of areas of ecological value and more intensive human use. The Marxan spatial analyses will iteratively identify: 1) areas with high conservation value based on ecological data only; 2) areas of high conservation value that minimize overlap with areas important to human use; and 3) areas of high conservation value that incorporate additional marine reserve design considerations. To guide and inform the analysis, we held five ecological expert workshops focused on various ecosystem components, are engaging user groups, and have a workshop planned to refine analysis methods. The ecological workshops drew on the knowledge and expertise of resource managers, the conservation community, academics and First Nations, to help assemble and use the best available data – biological, ecological and oceanographic – in developing sound, defensible analysis methods and products. Results of the BCMCA project are intended to advance marine planning initiatives in British Columbia by collaboratively and iteratively identifying potential areas of high conservation value.
author2 Bondrup-Nielsen, S.
Beazley, K.
Bissix, G.
Colville, D.
Flemming, S.
Herman, T.
McPherson, M.
Mockford, S.
O'Grady, S.
format Conference Object
author Ban, Natalie
Royle, Krista
Short, Charlie
Davis, Neil
Bodtker, Karin
Bryan, Tanya
Cripps, Ken
Day, Andrew
Haggarty, Dana
Lee, Lynn
Manson, Murray
Nicolson, Dave
Rasmussen, Glen
Ladell, Kate Willis
spellingShingle Ban, Natalie
Royle, Krista
Short, Charlie
Davis, Neil
Bodtker, Karin
Bryan, Tanya
Cripps, Ken
Day, Andrew
Haggarty, Dana
Lee, Lynn
Manson, Murray
Nicolson, Dave
Rasmussen, Glen
Ladell, Kate Willis
Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
author_facet Ban, Natalie
Royle, Krista
Short, Charlie
Davis, Neil
Bodtker, Karin
Bryan, Tanya
Cripps, Ken
Day, Andrew
Haggarty, Dana
Lee, Lynn
Manson, Murray
Nicolson, Dave
Rasmussen, Glen
Ladell, Kate Willis
author_sort Ban, Natalie
title Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
title_short Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
title_full Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
title_fullStr Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
title_full_unstemmed Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach
title_sort identifying priority areas for marine conservation in british columbia: a collaborative approach
publisher Science and Management of Protected Areas Association
publishDate 2010
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/1/2010_Ban_et_al_Identifying_priority_areas_for_marine_conservation_in_BC.pdf
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://www.sampaa.org/publications/conference-proceedings-1991-2000/sampaa-6-proceedings/system-planning/Ban%20et%20al%202010.pdf/view
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/15355/1/2010_Ban_et_al_Identifying_priority_areas_for_marine_conservation_in_BC.pdf
Ban, Natalie, Royle, Krista, Short, Charlie, Davis, Neil, Bodtker, Karin, Bryan, Tanya, Cripps, Ken, Day, Andrew, Haggarty, Dana, Lee, Lynn, Manson, Murray, Nicolson, Dave, Rasmussen, Glen, and Ladell, Kate Willis (2010) Identifying priority areas for marine conservation in British Columbia: a collaborative approach. In: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference of Science and the Management of Protected Areas. pp. 251-262. From: Sixth International Conference of Science and the Management of Protected Areas, 21-26 May 2007, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada.
op_rights restricted
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