Effects of fish movement assumptions on the design of a marine protected area to protect an overfished stock
Authored by Bjorn Birnir, Jorge Cornejo-Donoso, Baldvin Einarsson, Steven D Gaines
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186309
Sponsors:
The Fulbright Commission
Chilean National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT)
Latinoamerican Fisheries Fellowship
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Marine Protected Areas (MPA) are important management tools shown to
protect marine organisms, restore biomass, and increase fisheries
yields. While MPAs have been successful in meeting these goals for many
relatively sedentary species, highly mobile organisms may get few
benefits from this type of spatial protection due to their frequent
movement outside the protected area. The use of a large MPA can
compensate for extensive movement, but testing this empirically is
challenging, as it requires both large areas and sufficient time series
to draw conclusions. To overcome this limitation, MPA models have been
used to identify designs and predict potential outcomes, but these
simulations are highly sensitive to the assumptions describing the
organism's movements. Due to recent improvements in computational
simulations, it is now possible to include very complex movement
assumptions in MPA models (e.g. Individual Based Model). These have
renewed interest in MPA simulations, which implicitly assume that
increasing the detail in fish movement overcomes the sensitivity to the
movement assumptions. Nevertheless, a systematic comparison of the
designs and outcomes obtained under different movement assumptions has
not been done. In this paper, we use an individual based model,
interconnected to population and fishing fleet models, to explore the
value of increasing the detail of the movement assumptions using four
scenarios of increasing behavioral complexity: a) random, diffusive
movement, b) aggregations, c) aggregations that respond to environmental
forcing (e.g. sea surface temperature), and d) aggregations that respond
to environmental forcing and are transported by currents. We then
compare these models to determine how the assumptions affect MPA design,
and therefore the effective protection of the stocks. Our results show
that the optimal MPA size to maximize fisheries benefits increases as
movement complexity increases from similar to 10\% for the diffusive
assumption to similar to 30\% when full environment forcing was used. We
also found that in cases of limited understanding of the movement
dynamics of a species, simplified assumptions can be used to provide a
guide for the minimum MPA size needed to effectively protect the stock.
However, using oversimplified assumptions can produce suboptimal designs
and lead to a density underestimation of ca. 30\%; therefore, the main
value of detailed movement dynamics is to provide more reliable MPA
design and predicted outcomes. Large MPAs can be effective in recovering
overfished stocks, protect pelagic fish and provide significant
increases in fisheries yields. Our models provide a means to empirically
test this spatial management tool, which theoretical evidence
consistently suggests as an effective alternative to managing highly
mobile pelagic stocks.
Tags
Individual-based model
Simulation
Feeding-behavior
Population-models
Fisheries management
Swimming speed
Pelagic fish
Respiration rate
Reserve design
High seas