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You are here: Home / Publications / Contribution of tourism-led marine conservation agreements to natural resource management in Fiji

Contribution of tourism-led marine conservation agreements to natural resource management in Fiji

A study from March to October 2017 documented the extent and scale to which ‘Marine Conservation Agreements’ (MCAs) between tourism operators and indigenous, resource owning communities are used in Fiji, and their contribution to biodiversity conservation and fisheries management.

Title: Contribution of tourism-led marine conservation agreements to natural resource management in Fiji

Authors: Sangeeta Mangubhaia Helen Sykes bMarita Manley Kiji Vukikomoala d Madeline Beattiee

  • a Wildlife Conservation Society, 11 Ma’afu Street, Suva, Fiji
  • b Marine Ecology Consulting, P.O. Box 2558, Suva, Fiji
  • c Talanoa Treks/Talanoa Consulting, 28 Disraeli Rd, Suva, Fiji
  • d Fiji Environmental Law Association, 22 Dhanji Street, Samabula, Fiji
  • e University of Chicago, 5730 S. Woodlawn Avenue Chicago, IL 60637, USA

Publication: Ecological Economics

Download paper from Journal Ecological Economics here

Contribution of Marine Conservation Agreements to Biodiversity Protection, Fisheries Management and Sustainable Financing in Fiji

This paper is based on a report the Wildlife Conservation Society launched in 2018:

  • Sykes H, Mangubhai S, Manley M (2018)
  • Contribution of Marine Conservation Agreements to Biodiversity Protection, Fisheries Management and Sustainable Financing in Fiji.
  • Report No. 02/18. Wildlife Conservation Society, Suva, Fiji.
  • 98 pp

Highlights

  • Marine Conservation Agreements in Fiji are largely being used to establish MPAs.
  • Less than a third of MCAs include explicit financial incentives.
  • MCAs are contributing to biodiversity conservation and sustainable fisheries.

Abstract

The marine environment is vital for Fiji’s tourism sector, yet industry and community partnerships to conserve it have largely gone unrecognised.

A study from March to October 2017 documented the extent and scale to which ‘Marine Conservation Agreements’ (MCAs) between tourism operators and indigenous, resource owning communities are used in Fiji, and their contribution to biodiversity conservation and fisheries management.

More than half of operators (69.1%) interviewed had been involved, were involved, or were becoming involved, in some form of MCA, focused on temporary or permanent no-take Marine Protected Areas (MPAs).

MPAs established through MCAs covered an estimated 26,625 ha, of which 21,000 ha comprised deep water and offshore reefs within two large marine reserves, and 5625 ha comprised mostly nearshore shallow fringing reefs and slopes.

Only 28% of tourism-based MCAs included explicit economic incentives to the resource owners such as some level of payment, provision of infrastructure, or employment opportunities directly related to marine conservation.

The remaining 72% supplied broader benefits such as sustainable marine resources or general employment in the tourism sector.

Although MCAs are in place in Fiji with implied and not formal or explicit conditionality, they contribute to natural resource management and should be counted in global biodiversity targets.

Contributions of tourism-based Marine Conservation Agreements to natural resource management in Fiji

Download paper from Journal Ecological Economics here
Publication: Ecological Economics
Publication: Ecological Economics
  • Author: Sangeeta Mangubhai, Helen Sykes, Marita Manley, Kiji Vukikomoala, Madeline Beattie
  • Publication: Ecological Economics
  • Publisher: Elsevier
  • Date: May 2020
Download paper from Journal Ecological Economics here

© 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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