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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Benefits of closed area protection for a population of scallops

TLDR
This study details the dynamics of a population of great scallops Pecten maximus within a closed area and an adjacent fished area off the Isle of Man over a 14 yr period, finding that fisheries for relatively sedentary and long-lived species such as P. maximus appear to be particularly suitable for this type of management.
Abstract
Despite the current interest in using closed areas for fisheries management, few studies have actually examined the benefits for invertebrate fisheries such as scallops. This study details the dynamics of a population of great scallops Pecten maximus (L.), within a closed area and an adjacent fished area off the Isle of Man, over a 14 yr period (1989 to 2003). Scallop densities were very low in both areas when the closed area was set up, but increased at an accelerated rate over time within the closed area. Scallop densities also increased on the adjacent fishing ground, but not to the same extent. Consequently, the density of scallops above the minimum legal landing size (110 mm SL) was more than 7 times higher in the closed area than in the fished area by 2003. There was also a shift towards much older and larger scallops in the closed area and, correspondingly, lower estimates of total mortality. Experimental dredging of 2 plots within the closed area confirmed that fishing drove these differences in population dynamics and structure. These patterns of scallop density, age and size structure resulted in the exploitable biomass (adductor muscle and gonad) of scallops being nearly 11 times higher in the closed area than in the fished area by 2003, and the reproductive biomass was 12.5 times higher. This is significant for fisheries management because the build up of high densities of large P. maximus individuals enhanced local reproductive potential and therefore the likelihood of export of larvae to the surrounding fishing grounds. Along with these direct benefits of closed area protection, juvenile scallops had higher survival and individual growth rates in the closed area, apparently in response to reduced fishing disturbance. Although juvenile scallops are not subject to direct removal by fishing, protection during this critical phase therefore appeared to assist the recovery of the closed area population. In summary, this study joins a growing number indicating that the use of closed areas offers a range of benefits over more traditional methods of managing fisheries. Fisheries for relatively sedentary and long-lived species such as P. maximus appear to be particularly suitable for this type of management.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chronic bottom trawling alters the functional composition of benthic invertebrate communities on a sea-basin scale

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that chronic bottom trawling can lead to large scale shifts in the functional composition of benthic communities, with likely effects on the functioning of coastal ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spillover from six western Mediterranean marine protected areas: evidence from artisanal fisheries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated spillover (biomass export) around 6 marine protected areas (MPAs) in the western Mediterranean based on catch and effort data from artisanal fisheries and found evidence of effort concentration and high fishery production near fisheries closures for all fishing tactics analyzed and significant negative slopes for most.
Book ChapterDOI

Scallop Ecology: Distributions and Behaviour

TL;DR: Geographical and local distributions of scallop populations are reviewed, concentrating on the commercial species, and the behavioural mechanisms associated with byssus attachment, orientations and movements affect adult distribution are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting larval export from marine reserves.

TL;DR: A simple idealized coastline model is used to estimate the expected magnitude and spatial scale of larval export from no-take marine reserves across a range of reserve sizes and larval dispersal scales and suggests benefits from larvalExport are nearly always large enough to offset increased mortality outside marine reserves due to displaced fishing effort.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating the relative conservation value of fully and partially protected marine areas

TL;DR: In this article, the results of empirical studies that compared PPAs to (i) no-take reserves (NTRs) and (ii) to open access (Open) areas, to assess the potential benefits of different levels of protection for fish populations.
References
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Book

On the Dynamics of Exploited Fish Populations

TL;DR: Pitcher and Pauly as mentioned in this paper used a simple theory of fishing, illustrated by analysis of a trawl factoy, to give the annual yield in weight from a fishery in a steady state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards sustainability in world fisheries

TL;DR: Zoning the oceans into unfished marine reserves and areas with limited levels of fishing effort would allow sustainable fisheries, based on resources embedded in functional, diverse ecosystems.
Book ChapterDOI

The effects of fishing on marine ecosystems

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fishing on benthic fauna, habitat, diversity, community structure and trophic interactions in tropical, temperate and polar marine environments and consider whether it is possible to predict or manage fishing-induced changes in marine ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of marine reserves: do reserves work and does reserve size matter?

TL;DR: The empirical work and the theoretical literature are reviewed to assess the impacts of marine reserves on several biological measures (density, biomass, size of organisms, and diversity), paying particular attention to the role reserve size has in determining those impacts.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
What are the advantages and disadvantages of each method of preserving scallops?

The advantages of using closed areas for scallop preservation include increased scallop density, larger and older scallops, and higher reproductive potential. The disadvantages are not mentioned in the text.