On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields

Marine reserves are an essential component of modern fishery management. Marine reserves, which represent a management tradeoff between harvesting and conservation, are fundamental to maintenance of fisheries. Finding optimal reserve sizes that improve fishing yields is not only of theoretical inter...

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Main Author: Nao Takashina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-08-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9798.pdf
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author Nao Takashina
author_facet Nao Takashina
author_sort Nao Takashina
collection DOAJ
description Marine reserves are an essential component of modern fishery management. Marine reserves, which represent a management tradeoff between harvesting and conservation, are fundamental to maintenance of fisheries. Finding optimal reserve sizes that improve fishing yields is not only of theoretical interest, but also of practical importance to facilitate decision making. Also, since the migratory behavior of some species influences the spillover effect of a marine reserve, this is a key consideration when assessing performance of marine reserves. The relationship between optimal reserve size and migration rate/mode has not been well studied, but it is fundamental to management success. Here, I investigate optimal reserve size and its management outcome with different levels of spillover via a simple two-patch mathematical model. In this model, one patch is open to fishing, and the other is closed. The two-patch model is aggregated by single-population dynamics when the migration rate is sufficiently larger than the growth rate of a target species. At this limit, I show that an optimal reserve size exists when pre-reserve fishing occurs at fishing mortality larger than fMSY, the fishing mortality at the maximum sustainable yield (MSY). Also, the fishing yield at an optimal reserve size becomes as large as MSY at the limit. Numerical simulations at various migration rates between the two patches suggest that the maximum harvest under management with a marine reserve is achieved at this limit. This contrasts with the conservation benefit which is maximized at an intermediate migration rate. Numerical simulations show that the above-mentioned condition for an optimal reserve size to exist derived from the aggregated model is necessary when the migration rate is not sufficiently large, and that a moderate migration rate is further necessary for an optimal reserve size to exist. However, high fishing mortality reduces this requirement.
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spelling doaj.art-6aa95ff313fd436696d312e7f537fd162023-12-03T09:48:53ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-08-018e979810.7717/peerj.9798On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yieldsNao Takashina0Biodiversity and Biocomplexity Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, Okinawa, JapanMarine reserves are an essential component of modern fishery management. Marine reserves, which represent a management tradeoff between harvesting and conservation, are fundamental to maintenance of fisheries. Finding optimal reserve sizes that improve fishing yields is not only of theoretical interest, but also of practical importance to facilitate decision making. Also, since the migratory behavior of some species influences the spillover effect of a marine reserve, this is a key consideration when assessing performance of marine reserves. The relationship between optimal reserve size and migration rate/mode has not been well studied, but it is fundamental to management success. Here, I investigate optimal reserve size and its management outcome with different levels of spillover via a simple two-patch mathematical model. In this model, one patch is open to fishing, and the other is closed. The two-patch model is aggregated by single-population dynamics when the migration rate is sufficiently larger than the growth rate of a target species. At this limit, I show that an optimal reserve size exists when pre-reserve fishing occurs at fishing mortality larger than fMSY, the fishing mortality at the maximum sustainable yield (MSY). Also, the fishing yield at an optimal reserve size becomes as large as MSY at the limit. Numerical simulations at various migration rates between the two patches suggest that the maximum harvest under management with a marine reserve is achieved at this limit. This contrasts with the conservation benefit which is maximized at an intermediate migration rate. Numerical simulations show that the above-mentioned condition for an optimal reserve size to exist derived from the aggregated model is necessary when the migration rate is not sufficiently large, and that a moderate migration rate is further necessary for an optimal reserve size to exist. However, high fishing mortality reduces this requirement.https://peerj.com/articles/9798.pdfMarine reservesOptimal reserve sizeFisheries
spellingShingle Nao Takashina
On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
PeerJ
Marine reserves
Optimal reserve size
Fisheries
title On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
title_full On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
title_fullStr On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
title_full_unstemmed On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
title_short On the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
title_sort on the spillover effect and optimal size of marine reserves for sustainable fishing yields
topic Marine reserves
Optimal reserve size
Fisheries
url https://peerj.com/articles/9798.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT naotakashina onthespillovereffectandoptimalsizeofmarinereservesforsustainablefishingyields