The World Series Begins

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The World Series Begins

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Where does this work: sport-fishing, hunting, Not: commercial fishing. ... mayors were elected with ties to commercial fishing on the basis of 'giving the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The World Series Begins


1
The World Series Begins!!
2
Standings
  • Bay Area
  • Berkeley Bowlers 6
  • San Jose Bush Babies 4
  • Lafayette Diablos 4
  • San Francisco Huskies 4
  • Oakland Bombers 3
  • Pacific Rim
  • Sac Planetiers (1) 10
  • Hawaii T.huggers 5
  • Alaska Drillers 2
  • Sonoma Whiners 2
  • Martinez Muirs 2
  • So Cal
  • Ventura Squid 5
  • Snta Barb Green 5
  • SLO Moes 2
  • LA Ducts 2
  • SD Explorers 2

3
Issues This Week
  • The marine environment fisheries, ocean
    pollution.
  • Resource economics.
  • Open Access Resources and why they get
    over-exploited
  • What are some open access resources?
  • Depletable and Non-depletable resources
  • Your use does / does not diminish my use
  • Examples?
  • Tragedy of the Commons

There will be terminology and math-like stuff, do
not PANIC
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Five great things to do this week
  • Study for midterm exams
  • Study for midterm exams
  • Study for midterm exams
  • Study for midterm exams
  • Find a costume

Bring 1 of these Monday
Chapters 1,2,3,4,5,6
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Southwestern Pacific (Australia)
Western Pacific (China)
8
Only 50 years of fish left?
9
http//www.coml.org/medres/hmap7a.htm
10
Fishing
  • Most methods are very general and catch stuff not
    intended for harvest.
  • Some types of fishing are physically harmful to
    the environment as well (scraping the ocean floor
    of organisms (bottom trawling).

11
BY-CATCH
  • Stuff that fisherman catch, but dont want
  • Excessive by-catch prompted Florida to adopt
    mandatory Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs) so as to
    release sea turtles
  • Loss of efficiency for fishing industry
  • Shrimp
  • Highest by-catch rates and habitat destruction
    rates

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Aquaculture
Done? Done? Food for aquaculture
A mixed blessing
1. Pollution issues. 2. Remove lower trophic
levels from ecosystem.
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National Standards of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act Conservation and management measures
shall 1. Prevent overfishing while achieving
optimum yield. 2. Be based upon the best
scientific information available. 3. Manage
individual stocks as a unit throughout their
range, to the extent practicable interrelated
stocks shall be managed as a unit or in close
coordination. 4. Not discriminate between
residents of different states any allocation of
privileges must be fair and equitable. 5. Where
practicable, promote efficiency, except that no
such measure shall have economic allocation as
its sole purpose. 6. Take into account and
allow for variations among and contingencies in
fisheries, fishery resources, and catches. 7.
Minimize costs and avoid duplications, where
practicable. 8. Take into account the
importance of fishery resources to fishing
communities to provide for the sustained
participation of, and minimize adverse impacts
to, such communities (consistent with
conservation requirements). 9. Minimize bycatch
or mortality from bycatch. 10. Promote safety
of human life at sea. (http//www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
) (http//www.pcouncil.org/guide/Guide-part1.htm
l)
US Exclusive Economic zone 3 - 200 miles offshore
1976-Magnuson-Stevens Act
16
The New Era of Fishingfrom species to ecosystems
17
The Tragedy of the Commons
Why have past attempts failed?
A
B
Garrett Hardin. 1968.
Loosely based on the idea of feudal or tribal
commons. Why open access resources are
over-exploited
C
D
18
Four households share a common area that supports
(can sustain indefinitely) 20 cows. Each
household has 5 cows.
A
B
C
D
19
Households continue to add more cows until the
benefit gained by them individually is equal to
the cost in reduced vigor of cows.
.25 - .25
A
B
C
D
20
Too bad for you
A
The system eventually collapses from
over-exploitation
B
  • Believing this, we have 3 options.
  • Privatize ownership so that the landowner has
    control and a long term interest in sustaining a
    livelihood.
  • Create Cooperative Institutions that allow joint
    ownership for long-term care.
  • Legislate restraint

C
D
21
Fishermen sharing fish
A
B
C
D
22
The Economists Take
  • In the case of natural resources, it is human
    nature to overexploit resources when
  • The GAIN is to the individual harvesting the
    resource
  • The COST of providing the resource is borne by
    the whole of society, not the individual
  • The cost of supplying a public good often does
    not include the cost of the good itself, only the
    labor and tools to extract the good. Thus, they
    are cheaper than comparable private goods.

23
The resource economics of supply and demand
If the cost of harvesting the fish does not
include growing the fish, then the price of the
fish on the market is artificially low (Pp).
This results in quantities supplied (Qp)
relative to an equilibrium amount Qs).
Price
Quantity
24
Option 1 Resource Economics
If the cost of harvesting the fish does not
include growing the fish, then the price of the
fish on the market is artificially low (Pp).
This results in quantities supplied (Qp)
relative to an equilibrium amount Qs). The
solution increase the price on the market
through tariffs. In this case, fisherman license
fees. Problem Has not limited take to
sustainable levels.
Price
Ps
Pp
Qs
Qp
Quantity
25
Government Intervention 1 Increase COSTS of
open access goods through license fees
Price
Reduce harvest to sustainable levels through
license fees for resource extraction, increasing
the cost of harvest so that it equilibrates with
demand at a sustainable level.
Ps
Pp
Where does this work sport-fishing,
hunting, Not commercial fishing. It also does
not often incorporate option value of society.
Qs
Qp
Quantity
Option value the value society places on NOT
harvesting a resource
26
Government Intervention 2 RESTRICT ACCESS to
open access goods through licensing
Price
Reduce harvest to sustainable levels by
restricting access to resources (limiting the
number of boats fishing). Example the number of
taxi cabs in NYC is limited making it possible
for individual cab drivers to make a living. Cabs
go 24/7
Ps
Pp
Unfortunately, frequently does not work.
Fishermen can work more time, or more efficiently
to increase harvest effort. Drives technological
improvements to increase efficiency of catch.
Qs
Qp
Quantity
27
Government Intervention 3 PRIVATIZE open
access goods so that owners are vested in
long-term stability
IFQ's
Price
Privatizing resources has the effect of the
owner bears the cost of over-exploitation in
reduced long-term or resale value. Example
Logging company ownership of forests
Problem owners arent always interested in
conservation, and may find it financially
preferable to over-harvest (discounting).
Ps
Pp
Privatizing option 2 give ownership to a
cooperative and not to an individual. Example
Alaska groundfish
Qs
Qp
Quantity
28
Discounting the future
The problem with privatizing
  • Imagine a fisherman, who owns access to a
    resource.
  • This fisherman has 2 options.
  • (A) Fish them all out this year and earn 100,000
  • (B) Fish in moderation and make 10,000 / year in
    perpetuity.
  • If the fisherman is confident of being able to
    earn 10 on invested money, then choose option
    (A).
  • Lots of work in year 1, then early retirement
  • Add uncertainty to harvest, and it is often
    better to choose (A).
  • Thus, privatized resources are often
    over-exploited by choice
  • This might be fine if it really is a private
    good, but not so much when it is a societal good

29
San Diego Fires
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Fisheries management
Problems with setting limits (either through
increasing costs, or licensing)
  • The emphasis has often focused on using science
    to set sustained yield targets.
  • Monitoring of population
  • Set quotas of take
  • Limit boats limit catches per boat
  • But, there has been an alarming failure rate as
    fisheries continue to close or collapse.
  • WHY?

32
Set of priorities
  • Magnuson-Stevens, like most international laws
    set goal of sustainable fisheries
  • Sustainable pertaining to the livelihoods of the
    fishermen, not so much the fish.
  • Fail to take a precautionary approach
  • Set limits high, and require data to argue why
    they should be reduced, rather than the other way
    around.

33
SUSTAINED MAXIMUM YIELD (SMY)2. Harvest a
constant proportion
Population Growth Rate, or Harvest Rate
Population Size
34
SUSTAINED MAXIMUM YIELD (SMY)2. Harvest a
constant proportion
H1 Over-exploiting resource, growth H2 maximally-exploiting resource,
growth harvest - SMY
Population Growth Rate, or Harvest Rate
H3 harvest conservatively
Population Size
35
Maximum Yield Management
Setting the Allowable catch
  • Best efforts to manage fisheries using population
    biology fail because
  • Nature is difficult to assess It is difficult to
    accurately predict population growth lots of
    error
  • Environmental variation variation in weather can
    drive populations to the bad side of the curve
  • Political Pressure There is constant pressure to
    manage close to the MSY (higher harvest). The
    closer you get, the higher the risk of moving
    into the unstable zone where populations spiral
    to collapse.

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The New Era of Fishingfrom species to ecosystems
40
Marine Sanctuaries An alternative approach to
restricted access
  • Marine Management Areas
  • Closed Areas
  • Sensitive Sea Areas (eg, coral reefs)
  • Marine Sanctuaries
  • Integrated Management Areas
  • Marine Biosphere Reserves

Agardy, T.S. 1997. Marine Protected Areas and
Ocean Conservation.EIU.
41
Case StudyPhilippine Coral Reef Sanctuaries
  • Apo and Sumilon marine reserves were established
    in the mid 1970s
  • Community support has been strong and consistent
    at Apo
  • Community based management
  • Community support has fluctuated and enforcement
    variable at Sumilon

Russ and Alcala. 1999. Coral Reefs 18307-319.
42
Sumilon1973-1998
  • The community, 2 towns on nearby islands, set the
    rules with University help
  • In 1980 new mayors were elected with ties to
    commercial fishing on the basis of giving the
    island back to fishermen
  • The national government took control of
    management in 1980.
  • Enforcement has varied through time

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Apo1976-1998
  • The community set the rules
  • The community enforces the rules
  • The community is on the island
  • The community understands that maintaining the
    reef helps everyone

45
Results SUMILON APO
46
Global Assessment of Marine Reserves
  • 1306 marine reserves world-wide
  • 80 million hectares (160 mil acres)
  • 50 of the area is encompassed by 3
  • Galapagos, Great Barrier Reef, North Sea
  • Management known for only 383 (29)
  • 70 had low to moderate management effectiveness
  • 117 had levels of protection classified as high
  • (Kelleher et al. 1995. World Bank.)

47
Fishing Permanently Banned Around the Channel
Islands A reserve, encompassing 175 square
miles, takes effect Jan. 1 and is one of the
largest in the U.S.
2003
SANTA BARBARA -- The California Fish and Game
Commission on Wednesday permanently banned
fishing from 175 square miles of ocean around the
Channel Islands, approving one of the largest
marine reserves in U.S. waters.The decision
culminated four years of scientific and public
study and debate over the wisdom of substituting
traditional fishing restrictions, such as size
and catch limits on selected fish, with a reserve
system that protects all forms of marine
life."California once again is in the vanguard
of environmental protection," said Fish and Game
Commissioner Bob Hattoy. "This is good for the
fish, good for the fishermen and good for future
generations."Hundreds of angry,
placard-carrying fishermen said the decision
would cut into their livelihoods as well as put
some of their favorite fishing grounds off
limits."We pay a lot of dollars in fishing
license fees to the Department of Fish and Game
for the management of fisheries," said Tom
Raftican, president of United Anglers of Southern
California. "I have a very difficult time paying
for an area I cannot fish."
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