People and Nature (Oct 2023)

If you build it, they will come: Coastal amenities facilitate human engagement in marine protected areas

  • Christopher M. Free,
  • Joshua G. Smith,
  • Cori J. Lopazanski,
  • Julien Brun,
  • Tessa B. Francis,
  • Jacob G. Eurich,
  • Joachim Claudet,
  • Jenifer E. Dugan,
  • David A. Gill,
  • Scott L. Hamilton,
  • Kristin Kaschner,
  • David Mouillot,
  • Shelby L. Ziegler,
  • Jennifer E. Caselle,
  • Kerry J. Nickols

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 1592 – 1609

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Calls for using marine protected areas (MPAs) to achieve goals for nature and people are increasing globally. While the conservation and fisheries impacts of MPAs have been comparatively well‐studied, impacts on other dimensions of human use have received less attention. Understanding how humans engage with MPAs and identifying traits of MPAs that promote engagement is critical to designing MPA networks that achieve multiple goals effectively, equitably and with minimal environmental impact. In this paper, we characterize human engagement in California's MPA network, the world's largest MPA network scientifically designed to function as a coherent network (124 MPAs spanning 16% of state waters and 1300 km of coastline) and identify traits associated with higher human engagement. We assemble and compare diverse indicators of human engagement that capture recreational, educational and scientific activities across California's MPAs. We find that human engagement is correlated with nearby population density and that site “charisma” can expand human engagement beyond what would be predicted based on population density alone. Charismatic MPAs tend to be located near tourist destinations, have long sandy beaches and be adjacent to state parks and associated amenities. In contrast, underutilized MPAs were often more remote and lacked both sandy beaches and parking lot access. Synthesis and applications: These results suggest that achieving MPA goals associated with human engagement can be promoted by developing land‐based amenities that increase access to coastal MPAs or by locating new MPAs near existing amenities during the design phase. Alternatively, human engagement can be limited by locating MPAs in areas far from population centres, coastal amenities or sandy beaches. Furthermore, managers may want to prioritize monitoring, enforcement, education and outreach programmes in MPAs with traits that predict high human engagement. Understanding the extent to which human engagement impacts the conservation performance of MPAs is a critical next step to designing MPAs that minimize tradeoffs among potentially competing objectives. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

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