Authors
Thomas F Allnutt, Timothy R McClanahan, Serge Andréfouët, Merrill Baker, Erwann Lagabrielle, Caleb McClennen, Andry JM Rakotomanjaka, Tantely F Tianarisoa, Reg Watson, Claire Kremen
Publication date
2012/2/16
Journal
PLoS One
Volume
7
Issue
2
Pages
e28969
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Description
The Government of Madagascar plans to increase marine protected area coverage by over one million hectares. To assist this process, we compare four methods for marine spatial planning of Madagascar's west coast. Input data for each method was drawn from the same variables: fishing pressure, exposure to climate change, and biodiversity (habitats, species distributions, biological richness, and biodiversity value). The first method compares visual color classifications of primary variables, the second uses binary combinations of these variables to produce a categorical classification of management actions, the third is a target-based optimization using Marxan, and the fourth is conservation ranking with Zonation. We present results from each method, and compare the latter three approaches for spatial coverage, biodiversity representation, fishing cost and persistence probability. All results included large areas in the north, central, and southern parts of western Madagascar. Achieving 30% representation targets with Marxan required twice the fish catch loss than the categorical method. The categorical classification and Zonation do not consider targets for conservation features. However, when we reduced Marxan targets to 16.3%, matching the representation level of the “strict protection” class of the categorical result, the methods show similar catch losses. The management category portfolio has complete coverage, and presents several management recommendations including strict protection. Zonation produces rapid conservation rankings across large, diverse datasets. Marxan is useful for identifying strict protected areas that meet …
Total citations
201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202436712634766413