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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.umn.edu/28105

Title: MARINE RESERVES: WHAT WOULD THEY ACCOMPLISH?
Authors: Hannesson, Rognvaldur
Issue Date: 1998
Abstract: A marine reserve is defined as a subset of the area over which a fish stock is dispersed and closed to fishing. This paper investigates what will happen to fishing outside the marine reserve and to the stock size in the entire area as a result of establishing a marine reserve. Three regimes are compared: (i) open access to the entire area, (ii) open access to the area outside the marine reserve, and (iii) optimum fishing in the entire area. Two models are used: (i) a continuous-time model, and (ii) a discrete-time model, both using the logistic growth equation. Both models are deterministic equilibrium models. The conservation effect of a marine reserve is shown to be critically dependent on the size of the marine reserve and the migration rate of fish. A marine reserve will increase fishing costs and overcapitalization in the fishing industry, to the extent that it has any conservation effect on the stock, and in a seasonal fishery it will shorten the fishing season. For stocks with moderate to high migration rates, a marine reserve of a moderate size will have only a small conservation effect, compared with open access to the entire area inhabited by a stock. The higher the migration rate of fish, the larger the marine reserve must be in order to achieve a given level of stock conservation. A marine reserve of an appropriate size would achieve the same conservation effect as optimum fishing, but with a smaller catch.
URI: http://purl.umn.edu/28105
Institution/Association: Marine Resource Economics>Volume 13, Number 3, 1998
Total Pages: 12
Language: English
From Page: 159
To Page: 170
Collections:Volume 13, Number 3, 1998

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