Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




WATER WORLD
Fisheries benefit from 400-year-old tradition
by Staff Writers
New York NY (SPX) Oct 12, 2012


illustration only

A new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society and James Cook University says that coral reefs in Aceh, Indonesia are benefiting from a decidedly low-tech, traditional management system that dates back to the 17th century.

Known as "Panglima Laot" - the customary system focuses on social harmony and reducing conflict among communities over marine resources. According to the study, reefs benefitting from Panglima Laot contain as much eight time more fish and hard-coral cover due to mutually agreed upon gear restrictions especially prohibiting the use of nets.

The study, which appears in the October issue of the journal Oryx, is by Stuart Campbell, Rizya Ardiwijaya, Shinta Pardede, Tasrif Kartawijaya, Ahmad Mukmunin, Yudi Herdiana of the Wildlife Conservation Society; and Josh Cinner, Andrew Hoey, Morgan Pratchett, and Andrew Baird of James Cook University.

The authors say Panglima Laot has a number of design principles associated with successful fisheries management institutions. These include clearly defined membership rights, rules that limit resource use, the right of resource users to make, enforce and change the rules, and graduated sanctions and mechanisms for conflict resolution.

These principles are the key to the ability of the institution to reduce conflict among communities, provide sustainable access to marine resources, and limit the destruction of marine habitats.

"No-take fishing areas can be impractical in regions where people rely heavily on reef fish for food," said the study's lead author Dr. Stuart Campbell of the Wildlife Conservation Society.

"The guiding principle of Panglima Laot was successful in minimizing habitat degradation and maintaining fish biomass despite ongoing access to the fishery. Such mechanisms to reduce conflict are the key to success of marine resource management, particularly in settings which lack resources for enforcement."

However, the institution has not been uniformly successful. In particular, reef conditions in the adjacent island group of Pulau Aceh were poor possibly because of destructive fishing and poor coastal management. The precise causes of this breakdown of the Panglima Laot system are the focus of current research efforts in the region.

Other work by WCS and James Cook University suggests that fishers who are poorer and had lower levels of participation in resource management, had correspondingly lower levels of both trust in local institutions and involvement in community events. These groups subsequently felt less benefit from the customary PL system. In these places fishing is largely uncontrolled.

When the PL system is strong, and motivated by the aim of producing social harmony, restrictions on gear use by the Panglima Laot in Aceh have direct conservation benefits such as high coral cover and enhanced fish biomass.

Additional surveys over a wider geographical scale and over a longer period are required to reveal whether these findings also apply across larger scales and over time.

.


Related Links
Wildlife Conservation Society
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WATER WORLD
Costa Rica tightens ban on shark fins
San Jose (AFP) Oct 11, 2012
Costa Rica has banned the import of shark fins, closing a legal loophole and targeting a link in a global production chain stretching to Asian markets, where shark fin soup is seen as a delicacy. Environmental groups have long campaigned against shark finning, in which the fins are chopped off living sharks that are then dumped back into the water and left to die. Shark finning "is a pra ... read more


WATER WORLD
Which Biofuels Hold the Most Promise for the Future

Palm Oil Massive Source of Carbon Dioxide

Super-microbes engineered to solve world environmental problems

Computational Model IDs Potential Pathways to Improve Plant Oil Production

WATER WORLD
Worldwide patent for a Spanish stroke rehabilitation robot

Robot artist learns masters' brush strokes

Toyota unveils robot helping hand

Researchers Examine How Characteristics of Automated Voice Systems Affect Users' Experience

WATER WORLD
DNV KEMA awarded framework agreement for German wind project developer SoWiTec

Sandia Labs benchmark helps wind industry measure success

Bigger wind turbines make greener electricity

EU wind power capacity reaches 100GW

WATER WORLD
Tycoon offers Chinese cars for Japanese amid row

China's September auto sales fall on Japan row

Japan's Toyota to recall 7.43 mn vehicles globally

GM says China auto sales hit record in September

WATER WORLD
Mug handles could help hot plasma give lower-cost, controllable fusion energy

AllCell Granted U.S. Patent to Prevent Thermal Runaway Propagation in Li-ion Batteries

Japan, India to study LNG pricing

The Best of Both Catalytic Worlds

WATER WORLD
Lithuanian poll leaders pledge nuclear rethink

Swedish minister summons officials after nuke arrests

Judge to hear activists after nuclear hide-and-seek at Swedish plant

Nuclear hide-and-seek: Activists undiscovered at Swedish plant

WATER WORLD
Researchers map carbon footprint of cities

Global Renewable Energy Investments Continue to Grow

Greener industries grow faster than the overall economy

Regulator: Britain faces power shortages

WATER WORLD
Study finds nearly 50% of retail firewood infested with insects

Northern conifers youngest of the species

Climate change cripples forests

Semi-dwarf trees may enable a green revolution for some forest crop




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement