Little-to-no industrial fishing occurs in fully and highly protected marine areas
Jennifer Raynor, Sara Orofino, Christopher Costello, Gavin McDonald, Juan Mayorga, Enric Sala
Abstract
There is a widespread perception that illegal fishing is common in marine protected areas (MPAs) due to strong incentives for poaching and the high cost of monitoring and enforcement. Using artificial intelligence and satellite-based Earth observations, we provide estimates of industrial fishing activity in fully and highly protected MPAs worldwide, in which such fishing is banned. We find little to no activity in most cases. On average, these MPAs had just one fishing vessel present per 20,000 square kilometers during the satellite overpass, a density nine times lower than that of the unprotected waters of exclusive economic zones.
Topics & Concepts
FishingMarine protected areaPoachingEnforcementFisheryIncentiveMarine conservationCommercial fishingEnvironmental scienceGeographyBusinessEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental resource managementWildlifeEcologyHabitatEconomicsBiologyMicroeconomicsCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesMarine and fisheries researchMarine Ecology and Invasive Species