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Introduction:
The
Surfrider Foundation is a non-profit environmental organization
dedicated to the protection and enjoyment of the world's oceans,
waves and beaches for all people, through conservation, activism,
research and education. Surfrider has been active in marine
protection for almost twenty years by fighting to improve coastal
conditions for surfers, swimmers and all beach goers, while
protecting the coastal and marine environment. Surfers and ocean
users have often been called an ocean "indicator species" -
a group who first exhibits the symptoms and suffers from the
ill effects of poor management of our ocean and coastal resources.
For this reason, we fight for water quality, beaches and marine
environment protection so that all people can continue to enjoy
and recreate in healthy ocean and coastal ecosystems.
Three of Surfrider Foundation's guiding principles address this:
- SURFRIDER recognizes that the biodiversity and ecological
integrity of the planet's coasts are necessary and irreplaceable.
SURFRIDER is committed to preserving natural living and
non-living diversity and ecological integrity of the coastal
environment.
- SURFRIDER promotes the right of low-impact, free and open
access to the world's waves and beaches for all people.
SURFRIDER acts to preserve this right of access.
- SURFRIDER believes environmental education is essential
to the future health and well being of the planet.
Those of us who frequent our coasts do so for different reasons,
but we all value its importance and cherish our ability to enjoy
it. The ability to surf, fish, dive, kayak and swim in healthy
wild oceans is our coastal legacy and our birthright. However,
growing demands on these sensitive coastal and ocean places
threaten the health of our marine ecosystems and the fabric
of our coastal legacy.
Marine Protected Areas are generally defined as any areas of
the coast and ocean together with associated flora, fauna, historical
and cultural features, which has been reserved by law or other
effective means to protect part or the entire enclosed environment.
Our goal is to strike a balance between the first two guiding
principles, allowing ocean ecosystems to heal and perpetuate
while still granting human access, recreation and economic livelihood.
We believe that all areas of our ocean should be placed under
different levels of protection, including some that should be
set aside for full protection where fishing and the removing
or disturbing of living and nonliving material is prohibited.
Fully protected marine reserves can allow low-impact non-extractive
recreational activities such as diving and surfing while providing
opportunities for research and education. These activities still
allow protection of the coastal and ocean environment's ecological
integrity. In other areas, recreational uses, including fishing,
should be allowed. While fisheries management continues to dominate
discussions of marine protection efforts, the Surfrider Foundation
supports marine protection efforts that provide for a broader
range of goals, many of which are more directly relevant to
the public at large.
The Surfrider Foundation is working to create marine protected
areas in order to:
- Enhance the coastal experience by preserving wild recreational
areas. Full enjoyment of marine wilderness by surfers,
divers, kayakers and other non-extractive users can only
be achieved through the implementation of fully protected
marine reserves. Recreational fishing is also part of the
coastal legacy and that legacy is jeopardized by declines
in fisheries1. Not all marine
protected areas are "no-take" marine reserves, and a tiered
system of protected areas best reflects all the recreational
values of the coast and ocean.
- Protect special coastal and ocean places from dredging
and dumping, oil drilling, ocean pollution, fisheries mismanagement,
large commercial vessel traffic, poorly planned coastal
development and water quality problems, while promoting
marine education, recreation and research. Current and future
generations deserve special coastal places where we can
immerse ourselves in a natural setting. This is the legacy
we will leave for our children. Ecosystem research and education
can only be achieved if some places are protected from adverse
human impacts.
- Restore ecosystem health in marine, estuarine and beach
habitats. Recognition of our goal to protect special
places requires controlling what is added to the environment
as well as what is removed. Restoration efforts include
restoring habitat and natural processes in watersheds, estuaries,
beaches and dunes, intertidal and subtidal environments.
These efforts can restore natural habitats, improve recreation
opportunities and reduce costly mitigation efforts2.
We have learned to protect terrestrial areas in natural states
for the long-term benefit of animals and plants while providing
for recreational lifestyles. Many of us also place a great value
on knowing that some places are set aside for full protection,
even if we have no intention of ever visiting those places.
These areas are called wilderness areas, parks, reserves, preserves,
conservation areas, and sanctuaries. In the marine environment,
protected areas can serve the same purpose: establishing places
where human activity-harvest, pollution, disturbance-is limited
or prohibited so plants and animals have a safe place to live,
reproduce, and grow in as natural a state as possible. These
areas can also allow for non-extractive recreational activities
that provide for urban lifestyle stress relief and outdoor education.
However, there is a much larger amount of terrestrial preservation
as compared to marine preservation. Currently, less than 1%
of our oceans have any protected status3.
Surfrider Foundation believes that the ocean deserves a higher
level of protection for all natural and recreational resources.
Surfrider is working to identify and protect special coastal
places that will aid the preservation of our coastal legacy.
The best-designed protected areas have specific goals agreed
upon by scientists and managers, affected users, and the public
so that all stakeholders understand what resource(s) are being
protected and the reasons for that protection. To be most effective
the areas should form an overall network of protected zones
that take into account the multiple life stages and trophic
structures important to protected and unprotected species as
well as recreational criteria that would prescribe activities
that are allowed and prohibited throughout various parts of
the network. Finally, these zones should be established based
on desired water quality and habitat protection4.
Additionally, this zoning must maintain the linkages between
our beaches, estuaries, nearshore and offshore waters. Testing
the health of these linkages requires monitoring water and sediment
quality to indicate the health of the habitats.
Marine protected areas have been shown to conserve and restore
marine life by protecting the important places they need to
grow, feed, and reproduce. Protected areas will ensure the health
of recreational areas that define our coastal legacy.
Enhancement of the Coastal Experience:
Marine systems provide a range of benefits to humans, even if
the resources are not exploited. Many benefits of marine protected
areas are associated with extractive uses, but important non-extractive
uses are also provided by marine ecosystems5.
Terrestrial protected areas incorporate recreational use as
a component of their management goals. The Surfrider Foundation
believes that marine protected areas should accommodate and
enhance coastal and ocean recreation. Many coastal recreational
activities are non-extractive and have little or no discernable
impact on the marine environment such as surfing, sailing, kayaking
and diving. Recreational activities are an important part of
our coastal legacy. Surfrider Foundation believes that access
to coastal places is important to educate future generations
about our coastlines and oceans. However, we also believe that
certain areas should be restricted from human impacts to allow
our natural ecosystems to heal and to prosper. Marine protected
areas should establish "no-take reserve" zones for this purpose.
The use of "no-take reserves" in combination with water quality
protection and ecosystem restoration can holistically protect
coastal and ocean ecosystems while maintaining and allowing
for continued extractive recreational opportunities along their
borders6. Nevertheless, Surfrider
feels that all recreational activities, including fishing, should
be coordinated in a tiered system of marine protected areas.
Water Quality Protection:
Water quality protection is an integral part of marine protection
for both ecological and recreational benefits. Although this
goal of marine protection is often forgotten in the focus on
fisheries management, water quality is not only a key indicator
of overall marine ecosystem health, but also of critical importance
to human health.
Section 4 of the Presidential Executive Order Regarding Marine
Protected Areas in the United States establishes that the
national system of marine protected areas shall be designed,
"to better protect beaches, coasts, and the marine environment
from pollution...such regulations may include the identification
of areas that warrant additional pollution protections and the
enhancement of marine water quality standards." Several examples
exist where marine protection efforts have incorporated water
quality protection measures for both ecosystem protection and
provision of recreational benefits.
For example, an existing protective status in California called
Areas of Special Biological Significance (ASBS) limits water
quality impacts by prohibiting point source and storm drain
discharges7. In several cases
these protections overlap other protections against extractive
uses. In addition, there are provisions in the new California
Marine Life Protection Act that are intended to protect water
quality:
A "state water quality protection area," is a non-terrestrial
marine or estuarine area designated so the managing agency
may protect marine species, biological communities, or unique
or significant resources from an undesirable alteration in
natural water quality8.
Since urban nonpoint source runoff is the highest water quality
threat, these protected areas can help ensure healthy habitats
while also providing clean water for surfing and other recreational
activities. For example, by establishing marine protected areas,
urban runoff draining into a protected area would have to provide
a higher level of stormwater filtration, thereby lessening the
impacts on coastal water quality.
Restoration and Protection of Ecosystem Health:
Marine reserve areas are increasingly acknowledged as being
places where a rich variety of marine life returns and flourishes.
Fish populations increase, grow larger and produce more eggs;
invertebrates flourish among lush plant life, marine birds feed
or nest in greater numbers9.
Within a protected zone, a dynamic balance is established and
maintained and, in some instances, begins to replenish the areas
outside the zone10. However, many
of our most valued marine areas have already suffered significant
damage from pollution, mismanaged fishing and altered sedimentation
patterns.
Many of the species that inhabit our nearshore ecosystems are
long-lived animals with sporadically successful spawning events.
These populations can take decades to recover from over harvesting,
and even longer if enough of the larger, healthier adults are
not left in the population. Furthermore, some species, like
abalone and sea otters, have been completely extirpated from
many areas. Compounding the problem, estuaries, beaches and
much of our marine environment that serves as critical species
habitat have been decimated by coastal development, pollution
and excessive sedimentation. Surfrider Foundation endorses protection
and restoration efforts that will speed up the recovery of estuarine
and marine areas to naturally functioning ecosystems.
Protected status can safeguard marine areas from oil drilling,
large commercial vessel traffic and associated spills, dredging
and dumping, marine pollution, the loss and alteration of habitats
and recreational areas from bulkheads, seawalls, the creation
of harbors, and aquaculture operations11.
Conclusions:
In conclusion, the Surfrider Foundation believes that protection
of special coastal and ocean places through marine protection
efforts is a proactive and restorative tool that can balance
ecosystem protection with recreational use, enhance coastal
recreational opportunities, protect water quality and restore
coastal and ocean ecosystems.
We need to promote an ocean ethic, which results from education,
outreach and public input. Constructive conversation about the
design and implementation of marine protection is essential
both to the equity of the protection effort and compliance with
restrictions12.
[Also see Surfrider's Policy
on Marine Protection.]
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FOOTNOTES
1. National Research Council, 2001. Marine Protected Areas:
Tools for Sustaining Ocean Ecosystems. National Academy Press,
Washington, D.C.
2. Etnoyer P, Nelsen C, and Ranker. 2002. Beach Sand at
the Base of the Food Chain, Surfrider Foundation white paper.
3. Ibid.
4. U.S. Department of Commerce and the U.S. Department of
the Interior. (on-line). Accessed June 2002. Federal Marine
Protected Areas Web site. http://www.mpa.gov/mpadescriptive/whatis.html
5. National Research Council, 2001. Marine Protected Areas:
Tools for Sustaining Ocean Ecosystems. National Academy Press,
Washington, D.C.
6. Roberts, Callum M., et. al. 2001. Effects of Marine Reserves
on Adjacent Fisheries. Science, Volume 294.
7. Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. (online). Accessed
June 2002. A Review of Marine Zone in Monterey Bay NMS.
http://www.mbnms.nos.noaa.gov/Research/techreports/marinezones/asbs.html
8. California Department of Fish and Game. (online). Accessed
June 2002. Marine Life Protection Act Web site:
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/mrd/mlpa/defs.html#swqpa
9. Ibid.
10. Roberts, Callum M., et. al. 2001. Effects of Marine
Reserves on Adjacent Fisheries. Science, Volume 294.
11. Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. (online). Accessed
June 2002. A Review of Marine Zone in Monterey Bay NMS.
http://www.mbnms.nos.noaa.gov/Research/techreports/marinezones/nms.html
12. National Research Council, 2001. Marine Protected Areas:
Tools for Sustaining Ocean Ecosystems. |
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