TY - JOUR
T1 - Catalyzing sustainable fisheries management through behavior change interventions
AU - McDonald, Gavin
AU - Wilson, Molly
AU - Veríssimo, Diogo
AU - Twohey, Rebecca
AU - Clemence, Michaela
AU - Apistar, Dean
AU - Box, Stephen
AU - Butler, Paul
AU - Cadiz, Fel Cesar
AU - Campbell, Stuart J.
AU - Cox, Courtney
AU - Effron, Micah
AU - Gaines, Steve
AU - Jakub, Raymond
AU - Mancao, Roquelito H.
AU - Rojas, Pablo T.
AU - Tirona, Rocky Sanchez
AU - Vianna, Gabriel
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - Small-scale fisheries are an important livelihood and primary protein source for coastal communities in many of the poorest regions in the world, yet many are overfished and thus require effective and scalable management solutions. Positive ecological and socioeconomic responses to management typically lag behind immediate costs borne by fishers from fishing pressure reductions necessary for fisheries recovery. These short-term costs challenge the long-term success of these interventions. However, social marketing may increase perceptions of management benefits before ecological and socioeconomic benefits are fully realized, driving new social norms and ultimately long-term sustainable behavior change. By conducting underwater visual surveys to quantify ecological conditions and by conducting household surveys with community members to quantify their perceptions of management support and socioeconomic conditions, we assessed the impact of a standardized small-scale fisheries management intervention that was implemented across 41 sites in Brazil, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The intervention combines TURF reserves (community-based territorial use rights for fishing coupled with no-take marine reserves) with locally tailored social-marketing behavior change campaigns. Leveraging data across 22 indicators and 4 survey types, along with data from 3 control sites, we found that ecological and socioeconomic impacts varied and that communities supported the intervention and were already changing their fishing practices. These results suggest that communities were developing new social norms and fishing more sustainably before long-term ecological and socioeconomic benefits of fisheries management materialized.
AB - Small-scale fisheries are an important livelihood and primary protein source for coastal communities in many of the poorest regions in the world, yet many are overfished and thus require effective and scalable management solutions. Positive ecological and socioeconomic responses to management typically lag behind immediate costs borne by fishers from fishing pressure reductions necessary for fisheries recovery. These short-term costs challenge the long-term success of these interventions. However, social marketing may increase perceptions of management benefits before ecological and socioeconomic benefits are fully realized, driving new social norms and ultimately long-term sustainable behavior change. By conducting underwater visual surveys to quantify ecological conditions and by conducting household surveys with community members to quantify their perceptions of management support and socioeconomic conditions, we assessed the impact of a standardized small-scale fisheries management intervention that was implemented across 41 sites in Brazil, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The intervention combines TURF reserves (community-based territorial use rights for fishing coupled with no-take marine reserves) with locally tailored social-marketing behavior change campaigns. Leveraging data across 22 indicators and 4 survey types, along with data from 3 control sites, we found that ecological and socioeconomic impacts varied and that communities supported the intervention and were already changing their fishing practices. These results suggest that communities were developing new social norms and fishing more sustainably before long-term ecological and socioeconomic benefits of fisheries management materialized.
KW - behavior change campaigns, fisheries management, impact evaluation, monitoring and evaluation, perceptions data
KW - small-scale fisheries
KW - social marketing, TURF reserve
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083800516&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/cobi.13475
DO - 10.1111/cobi.13475
M3 - Article
C2 - 32011772
AN - SCOPUS:85083800516
SN - 0888-8892
VL - 34
SP - 1176
EP - 1189
JO - Conservation Biology
JF - Conservation Biology
IS - 5
ER -