If you build it, they will come: Coastal amenities facilitate human engagement in marine protected areas

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Christopher M. Free, Joshua G. Smith, Cori J. Lopazanski, Julien Brun, Tessa B. Francis, Jacob G. Eurich, Joachim Claudet, Jenifer E. Dugan, David A. Gill, Scott L. Hamilton, Kristin Kaschner, David Mouillot, Shelby L. Ziegler, Jennifer E. Caselle, Kerry J. Nickols
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract Calls for using marine protected areas (MPAs) to achieve goals for nature and people are increasing globally. While the conservation and fisheries impacts of MPAs have been comparatively well‐studied, impacts on other dimensions of human use have received less attention. Understanding how humans engage with MPAs and identifying traits of MPAs that promote engagement is critical to designing MPA networks that achieve multiple goals effectively, equitably and with minimal environmental impact. In this paper, we characterize human engagement in California's MPA network, the world's largest MPA network scientifically designed to function as a coherent network (124 MPAs spanning 16% of state waters and 1300 km of coastline) and identify traits associated with higher human engagement. We assemble and compare diverse indicators of human engagement that capture recreational, educational and scientific activities across California's MPAs. We find that human engagement is correlated with nearby population density and that site “charisma” can expand human engagement beyond what would be predicted based on population density alone. Charismatic MPAs tend to be located near tourist destinations, have long sandy beaches and be adjacent to state parks and associated amenities. In contrast, underutilized MPAs were often more remote and lacked both sandy beaches and parking lot access. Synthesis and applications : These results suggest that achieving MPA goals associated with human engagement can be promoted by developing land‐based amenities that increase access to coastal MPAs or by locating new MPAs near existing amenities during the design phase. Alternatively, human engagement can be limited by locating MPAs in areas far from population centres, coastal amenities or sandy beaches. Furthermore, managers may want to prioritize monitoring, enforcement, education and outreach programmes in MPAs with traits that predict high human engagement. Understanding the extent to which human engagement impacts the conservation performance of MPAs is a critical next step to designing MPAs that minimize tradeoffs among potentially competing objectives. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
如果你建造了它,它们就会来:沿海设施促进了人们在海洋保护区的参与
在全球范围内,利用海洋保护区(MPAs)来实现自然和人类目标的呼声日益高涨。虽然海洋保护区的保护和渔业影响已经得到了比较充分的研究,但对人类利用的其他方面的影响却很少受到关注。了解人类如何与海洋保护区互动,并确定促进互动的海洋保护区特征,对于设计有效、公平、以最小环境影响实现多重目标的海洋保护区网络至关重要。在本文中,我们描述了人类参与加州海洋保护区网络的特征,这是世界上最大的海洋保护区网络,其科学设计是作为一个连贯的网络(124个海洋保护区跨越16%的州水域和1300公里的海岸线),并确定了与较高人类参与相关的特征。我们收集并比较了人类参与的各种指标,这些指标涵盖了加州海洋保护区的娱乐、教育和科学活动。我们发现,人类的参与与附近的人口密度有关,而该地点的“魅力”可以扩大人类的参与,超出仅基于人口密度的预测。有魅力的海洋保护区往往位于旅游目的地附近,有长长的沙滩,毗邻州立公园和相关设施。相比之下,未充分利用的海洋保护区往往更偏远,既没有沙滩,也没有停车场。综合与应用:这些结果表明,可以通过开发陆上设施来增加沿海海洋保护区的使用,或者在设计阶段将新的海洋保护区定位在现有设施附近,从而促进与人类参与相关的海洋保护区目标的实现。或者,将海洋保护区设在远离人口中心、沿海设施或沙滩的地区,可以限制人类的参与。此外,管理人员可能希望优先考虑海洋保护区的监测、执法、教育和推广项目,这些项目具有预测人类高度参与的特征。了解人类活动对海洋保护区保护绩效的影响程度是设计海洋保护区的关键一步,从而最大限度地减少潜在竞争目标之间的权衡。在《华尔街日报》博客上阅读免费的《简明语言摘要》。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
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