Lavoisier S.A.S.
14 rue de Provigny
94236 Cachan cedex
FRANCE

Heures d'ouverture 08h30-12h30/13h30-17h30
Tél.: +33 (0)1 47 40 67 00
Fax: +33 (0)1 47 40 67 02


Url canonique : www.lavoisier.fr/livre/documentation/marine-protected-areas/descriptif_4175460
Url courte ou permalien : www.lavoisier.fr/livre/notice.asp?ouvrage=4175460

Marine Protected Areas Science, Policy and Management

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Humphreys John, Clark Robert

Couverture de l’ouvrage Marine Protected Areas

Marine Protected Areas: Science, Policy and Management addresses a full spectrum of issues relating to Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) not currently available in any other single volume. Chapters are contributed by a wide range of working specialists who examine conceptions and definitions of MPAs, progress on the implementation of worldwide MPAs, policy and legal variations across MPAs, the general importance of coastal communities in implementation, and the future of MPAs. The book constructively elucidates conflicts, issues, approaches and solutions in a way that creates a balanced consideration of the nature of effective policy and management.

Those in theory, designation, implementation or management of MPAs, from individuals, marine sector organizations, and university and research center libraries will find it an important work.

Foreword: Progress towards the conservation and sustainable use of the oceasn: targets and challenges Preface Acknowledgements

PART ONE: POLICY 1. A critical history of marine protected areas 2. Marine protected areas and marine spatial planning - allocation of resource use and environmental protection 3. Challenges facing marine protected areas in Southern African countries in light of the expanding ocean economies in the sub-region 4. The South Orkney Islands Southern Shelf Marine Protected Area: towards the establishment of marine spatial protection within the international waters in the Southern Ocean 5. Uneasy Bedfellows: Fisheries and the search for space for Marine Conservation Zones in English Waters 6. The role of coastal communities in the sustainable management of marine protected areas 7.  The use of natural capital in the choice, management and evaluation of MPAs 8. Some consequences of policy instabilities for marine protecred area management 9. Managing marine protected areas in Europe: moving from 'feature-based' to 'whole-site; management of sites 10. The role of UK Marine Protected Area management in contributing to sustainable development in the marine environment 11. The law and marine protected areas: different regimes and their practical impacts in England 12. Marine protected areas in the UK - conservation or recovery? 13. South Africa's Tsitsikamma Marine Protected Area - winners and losers

PART TWO: MANAGEMENT 14. Developing a fisheries management plan for the Pitcairn Islands Marine Protected Area 15. Countering the threat of invaive species to the Galapagos marine reserve 16. Balancing rural development and robust nature conservation - lessons learnt from Kosterhavet Marine National Park, Sweden 17. The Torre Guaceto marine protected area e what can we learn from this success story? 18. The challenges of establishing marine protected areas in South East Asia 19. Have you seen the dolphins? Dolphin watching participatory monitoring in a Brazilian multiple-use Marine Protected Area 20. A new approach to monitoring Marine Protected Area Management Success in the Dutch Caribbean 21. Crossing jurisdictions: the implementation of offshore marine protected areas in an international fishery 22. A net positive effect? Assessing the impact on fishing opportunities within multiple-use MPAs. A case study from Scotland 23. Managing a dredge fishery within a marine protected area: resolving environmental and socio-economic objectives 24. Marine protected areas - the importance of positive partnerships and stakeholder engagement for delivering environmental outcomes in an estuary 25. Enforcement capabilities and compliance in English Marine Protected Areas: the art of the possible

PART THREE: SCIENCE 26. Using science effectively: selection, design and management of marine protected areas 27. How new science should affect the application of protection measures for UK estuarine shorebirds 28. Verifying predictions of statistical models to define the size and shape of marine Special Protection Areas for foraging seabirds (terns) 29. Developments in understanding of red-throated diver responses to offshore wind farms in marine Special Protection Areas 30. Sediment transport and Marine Protected Areas 31. On sediment dispersal in the Whitsand Bay Marine Conservation Zone: neighbour to a closed dredge-spoil disposal site 32. Maintaining ecological resilience on a regional scale: coastal saline lagoons in a northern European marine protected area 33. The adaptive capacity of the willow (Salix alba L.) to bridge the gap between MPAs and harbour entrances 34. Palaeoenvironmental determination of biogeochemistry and ecological response in an estuarine marine protected area 35. Consequences of nitrate enrichment in a temperate estuarine marine protected area; response of the microbial primary producers and consequences for management 36. Macroalgal mats in a eutrophic estuarine marine protected area: implications for benthic invertebrates and wading birds 37. Assessing the benefits of shellfish aquaculture in improving water quality in Poole Harbour, an estuarine Marine Protected Area 38. Nitrogen pollution in coastal Marine Protected Areas: a river catchment partnership to plan and deliver targets in a UK estuarine Special Protection Area

PART FOUR: CONCLUDING REMARKS 39. Marine Protected Areas: Quo Vadis?

Marine oceanographers, marine conservationists, Marine biologists, marine management practitioners, Aquatic Ecologists

After ten years as Pro Vice-Chancellor at the University of Greenwich, London, John moved to the south coast of England where he is currently visiting professor at the Institute of Marine Sciences, Portsmouth and Chairman of the Southern Inshore Fisheries & Conservation Authority: The latter statutory organisation being responsible for a sea area of which more than 50% is occupied by 15 marine protected areas with over 30 different overlapping designations. His main research focus is on the ecology of non-native bivalve species, but he has also published on various aspects of policy. His work in Africa won a Queen’s Award for his University in 2007. John is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology and on the Council of the Estuarine & Coastal Sciences Association.
Robert is a fisheries and conservation manager with 20 years of practical experience of developing and implementing coastal and marine fisheries management. Robert holds degrees in Environmental Protection, Coastal Management and an MBA (Open). The majority of his career has been spent working in fisheries and MPA management and planning in the UK. He worked extensively as a sea going enforcement officer and qualified as a helmsman with the RNLI with extensive prior search and rescue experience. He has been responsible for developing and implementing successful strategy to turn around some of the poorest performing fisheries in the UK and in so doing delivering both conservation as well as economic benefits. Robert is a Council Member of the Institute of Fisheries Management and Chief Officer for the Southern Inshore Fisheries and Conservation Authority where he has overall responsibility for delivering MPA and fisheries management strategy.
  • Provides a much needed ‘one stop shop’ for information on Marine Protected Areas
  • Presents chapters from a diverse group of contributors, enabling a broad and deep perspective
  • Includes case studies throughout, providing real-life examples and best practice recommendations