Introduction
Marine protected areas are one of many tools for protecting the marine environment, and a number of international targets have been set to encourage their establishment. In 2010, Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity adopted the Aichi Targets, Target 11 of which commits participating countries to conserving at least 10% of coastal and marine areas by 2020 ‘through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically representative and well-connected systems of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures…integrated into the wider landscapes and seascapes’ (CBD, 2010). More recently, participants at the 2014 World Parks Congress recommended that 30% of the ocean be protected from extractive activities (IUCN, 2014), an ambitious but non-binding conservation target reinforcing the earlier recommendation of the 2003 World Parks Congress for 20–30% of the oceans to be no-take areas (IUCN, 2003).
Overall, progress towards meeting international targets has been slow and targets have not been met (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008; Toropova et al., Reference Toropova, Meliane, Laffoley, Matthews and Spalding2010; Wood, Reference Wood2011; Veitch et al., Reference Veitch, Dulvy, Koldewey, Lieberman, Pauly and Roberts2012). Since the mid 2000s there has been a dramatic increase in the protection of large areas of ocean, which could influence trends in the growth of protected areas. In 2014 New Caledonia declared the 1,291,000 km2 Natural Park of the Coral Sea, and the USA expanded the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument from 216,000 to 1,267,000 km2. The previous year Australia established the 990,000 km2 Coral Sea Commonwealth Marine Reserve, and South Africa legally designated the Prince Edward Islands Marine Protected Area, adding 180,000 km2 to global coverage. Other large marine protected areas are in the planning stages and are due to be designated in the near future (Table 1).
1 Estimated marine area based on the inner fishing area extending to 5 nm (9 km; RSPB, 2014)
2 Estimated marine area based on the inner fishing area extending to 140 nm (259 km), representing the midpoint of three marine protected area options presented by the Government of Bermuda (2013)
4 Estimated marine area based on the inner fishing area extending to c. 45 km, representing the midpoint of the proposed areas (The Pew Charitable Trusts, 2012)
5 MPA News (2014b)
6 The Pew Charitable Trusts (2015a)
7 Marianas Variety (2015)
8 At the time of submission of this article, budget had been allocated to this marine protected area; The Pew Charitable Trusts (2015b)
9 A. Gammell, Global Ocean Legacy, The Pew Charitable Trusts, pers. comm.
A comprehensive assessment of marine protected area coverage shows an increase to 2.3% of the global ocean in 2012 (Spalding et al., Reference Spalding, Meliane, Milam, Fitzgerald, Hale, Chircop, Coffen-Smout and McConnell2013), from 0.65% in 2006 (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008). The area of protected ocean within Exclusive Economic Zones increased from 1.6% (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) to 5.5% (Spalding et al., Reference Spalding, Meliane, Milam, Fitzgerald, Hale, Chircop, Coffen-Smout and McConnell2013) during 2006–2012. However, significant expansion in marine protected area is required to reach the 10% coverage target of the Convention on Biological Diversity by 2020.
The utility of global percentage targets has been questioned (e.g. Margules & Pressey, Reference Margules and Pressey2000; Agardy et al., Reference Agardy, Bridgewater, Crosby, Day, Dayton and Kenchington2003; Wood, Reference Wood2011; De Santo, Reference De Santo2013). Although designation of marine protected areas is not sufficient to ensure effective conservation, it is a first step, and protected area extent is a simple, comprehensible and quantifiable metric that has been chosen by the international community to encourage conservation action. The objectives of this research are to investigate the extent of designated marine protected areas by providing an updated estimate of global marine protected area, both total and no-take, and assessing the feasibility of protecting 10% of global marine areas by 2020.
Methods
The methods used are largely based on those of Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008).
Database
The global database of marine protected areas originally developed by Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) and maintained by Sea Around Us (2015) was updated and expanded using a variety of data sources, including national inventories, other protected area databases, legislation, management plans, peer-reviewed and grey literature, and direct communication with local experts. Some 600 sites were deleted as non-qualifying marine protected areas (based on their not conforming to the two widely accepted definitions of marine protected areas below), > 700 site details were updated and > 2,500 records were added.
The criterion originally used for inclusion of marine protected areas in the database (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) was based on the 1999 IUCN definition: ‘Any area of intertidal or subtidal terrain, together with its overlying water and associated flora, fauna, historical and cultural features, which has been reserved by law or other effective means to protect part or all of the enclosed environment’ (Kelleher, Reference Kelleher1999). This has since been superseded by a new definition: ‘A clearly defined geographical space, recognized, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values’ (Dudley, Reference Dudley2008). This definition does not refer to the marine environment specifically. Whereas the updated definition was relied upon to differentiate between protected areas and areas declared for extractive uses (Dudley, Reference Dudley2008), the 1999 definition specifies the criterion for a marine rather than a terrestrial protected area. As per Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008), this definition was applied by reviewing whether the legal boundary of a site extended seawards of the mean high-water mark. Other criteria for inclusion in the database are outlined in Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008).
Marine protected area coverage
Global marine protected area was estimated based on all marine protected areas in the database up to the end of 2013, with the addition of the two large areas of ocean, each > 1 million km2, protected during 2014. These are New Caledonia's Natural Park of the Coral Sea and the expanded area of the U.S. Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, both established within Exclusive Economic Zones. Although the database does not include all marine protected areas established up to the end of 2014, ensuring inclusion of the largest ones was a priority as these represent a disproportionately large percentage of global coverage.
Given the lack of spatial data for many marine protected areas in the database, coverage was calculated by summing their marine areas, with the exception of marine protected areas in Australia, the USA and the UK, which are known to have significant overlapping areas and have comprehensive spatial data available. UNESCO World Heritage sites, UNESCO Man and the Biosphere reserves, and Ramsar sites (wetlands of international importance) were excluded because of their near-complete overlap with nationally designated sites. This decision is in line with other global studies of marine protected areas (e.g. Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008; Toropova et al., Reference Toropova, Meliane, Laffoley, Matthews and Spalding2010). When the marine area was unknown, the total area was prorated according to the median proportion of marine area (relative to total area) for those marine protected areas for which this quantity was known in that country. Thus it was assumed that marine protected areas within a country were similar in terms of their marine and terrestrial proportions. Marine protected areas for which there was no areal information (c. 5%) were excluded from coverage statistics.
For Australia, the USA and the UK, all of which have large areas of overlapping marine protected area designations, alternative sources of comprehensive spatial information were used. For Australia, 2012 spatial data were downloaded from the Collaborative Australian Protected Areas Database and used without amendment. For the USA, spatial data current as of March 2013 were accessed from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's marine protected area inventory, and the following amendments were made to the dataset: (1) protected areas in the Great Lakes were excluded, and (2) temporally dynamic sites and those with sustainable production as their primary conservation focus were excluded as they do not fulfil the IUCN definition of a protected area, which stipulates that protected areas should be designated for the long term and have the primary objective of nature conservation (Day et al., Reference Day, Dudley, Hockings, Holmes, Laffoley, Stolton and Wells2012; NOAA, 2013). However, some U.S. sites that do not fulfil the IUCN definition remain in the database (i.e. fisheries management areas that offer limited protection). To calculate total marine protected area and its annual increase for Australia and the USA, all overlapping areas were removed using the Symmetrical Difference tool in ArcGIS v. 10.2 (ESRI, Redlands, USA) to avoid double-counting. For the UK, data for annual, cumulative marine protected area coverage were taken from the UK Biodiversity Indicators in Your Pocket 2013 report (indicator C1) current to June 2013 (Defra & JNCC, 2013). Although there was probably some overlap of marine protected areas in other countries, this was considered to be negligible relative to the total marine protected area.
No-take coverage
No-take marine protected areas or zones were considered to be ‘marine areas in which the extraction of living and non-living resources is permanently prohibited, except as necessary for monitoring or research to evaluate effectiveness’ (Jones, Reference Jones2007). However, for most countries the definition used by national data sources for no-take coverage was relied upon, which potentially introduced inconsistencies with regard to this definition; for example, Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument is listed as a no-take area by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, although it allows some subsistence fishing by permit (NOAA, 2011).
For the USA and Australia the total no-take area was calculated using spatial datasets (as above) and their associated metadata. For the USA all marine protected areas designated as no take, no access and no impact in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's marine protected area inventory were included in calculations of no-take area. This criterion provides an approximate delineation between no-take and other marine protected areas as it includes some areas that allow limited extractive uses and excludes others with zoned no-take areas.
For Australia, IUCN management categories Ia, Ib and II were used as a proxy for the presence of no-take regulations. Although IUCN management categories have generally been applied inconsistently, Australia has implemented a national initiative to align its protected area designations with the IUCN management categories. Again, however, this does not provide a clear criterion. Although categories Ia, Ib and II are considered to be largely incompatible with extractive uses (except some traditional use in Ib and II protected areas), in practice IUCN management categories are applied according to management objectives, not management actions (Day et al., Reference Day, Dudley, Hockings, Holmes, Laffoley, Stolton and Wells2012); thus, there may be inconsistencies regarding allowable activities (Fitzsimons, Reference Fitzsimons2011). Despite this uncertainty, using the IUCN management categories as a proxy for no-take area in Australia was considered the most suitable option. The only amendment was to exclude the 2012 Commonwealth marine protected areas (including the Coral Sea Marine Reserve, approximately half of which would have been no-take) from no-take area calculations, as the management plans for these sites have been scrapped and will be redrafted (MPA News, 2013, 2014a).
Information on no-take area was available for most marine protected areas (c. 67%). An additional 1% of marine protected areas were known to be partly no-take, although the exact no-take area was unknown. The total marine area of these marine protected areas was prorated using the median proportion of no-take area (relative to total marine area) for those marine protected areas for which this quantity was known. Thus it was assumed that marine protected areas with some no-take area were similar in terms of the proportion of their area designated as no take. Marine protected areas for which there was no information about the extent of their no-take area were excluded from calculations of no-take coverage. Although the expanded Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument has been widely described as a no-take area, technically it is not, as some recreational fishing is allowed.
Increase in marine protected area coverage
Year of marine protected area designation was used to calculate cumulative marine protected area over time since 1950. These data were available for c. 93% of marine protected areas, representing c. 98% of the total global coverage. Where inconsistencies between original year of designation and the area declared were known, this information was updated to reflect increases in coverage as accurately as possible. For example, the waters surrounding the Galapagos Islands were first protected in 1986 as a Marine Resource Reserve Area, and although there have been subsequent changes in designation type (Jones, Reference Jones2013), in this analysis the area was considered protected from 1986 onwards. However, the no-take areas were zoned during 2000, and therefore those areas were considered as designated during that year.
In accordance with the methods of Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) the remaining protected area (c. 2% of global coverage without information on year of designation) was distributed across all years from 1950 to 2013 according to the proportion of the total marine protected area designated in each year.
Proposed marine protected areas
Additional large marine protected areas have been proposed and may be designated in the next few years (Table 1). Online resources and communication with experts were used to estimate the likely size of these areas, many of which are proposed to cover entire Exclusive Economic Zones. The areas used in this research do not represent the final sizes of these marine protected areas, which are still in the consultation and planning stages, but rather a possible scenario for a future increase in marine protected area coverage. If designated, not all of the proposed marine protected areas will add to quantitative measures of global coverage, as some of these areas are already designated but with less strict protection levels than will be facilitated by the proposed designations. Thus before incorporating these areas into projections for possible future increases in marine protected area, the area already designated (up to the end of 2013) within each one's proposed limits was subtracted from the estimated area. The combined area of the proposed marine protected areas (Table 1) was distributed evenly across years from 2015 to 2020 to represent a hypothetical scenario for future marine protected area expansion. Linear regression of the logged hypothetical increase in cumulative global protected area from 2015 to 2020 (based on the proposed marine protected areas) was used to estimate a hypothetical annual growth rate.
Other possible future scenarios for increased marine protected area coverage were considered for the Sargasso Sea (Laffoley et al., Reference Laffoley, Roe, Angel, Ardron, Bates and Boyd2011), the Arctic high seas and the global high seas (Sumaila et al., Reference Sumaila, Zeller, Watson, Alder and Pauly2007, Reference Sumaila, Lam, Miller, Teh, Watson and Zeller2015), as well as a scenario treating the Southern Ocean area managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources as a marine protected area.
Results
Global network of marine protected areas
According to the Sea Around Us database 6,186 marine protected areas covering c. 11.9 million km2 were designated by the end of 2013. This represents 3.3% of the world's oceans. Of that global protected area, 16% is within no-take areas, covering 1.93 million km2, or 0.53% of the global ocean. Of the ocean area within Exclusive Economic Zones 8% (c. 11.3 million km2) is designated as protected. In the high seas c. 0.5 million km2 (0.2% of the high seas area) is protected.
The mean and median sizes of marine protected areas globally are c. 2,430 and 3.3 km2, respectively. The substantial difference between the two is attributable to the existence of a small number of very large marine protected areas, which dominate areal statistics. Whereas the smallest marine protected area covers a fraction of a hectare (< 0.001 km2), the largest extends across > 1 million km2.
Inclusion of the two > 1 million km2 areas protected within Exclusive Economic Zones (in New Caledonia and the USA) during 2014 increases the total area of global ocean protected to c. 14.2 million km2 (3.9%) and almost 10% (c. 13.7 million km2) of the ocean that is within Exclusive Economic Zones. Given that other marine protected areas were established during 2014 it is likely that the true area of ocean protected is > 10% of the total within Exclusive Economic Zones.
The combined area of the 24 marine protected areas that are > 100,000 km2 (including those designated during 2014) is > 8.7 million km2, representing 62% of global marine protected area. Thirteen of these were designated after 2006.
Attainment of global coverage targets
Cumulative global marine protected area increased steadily but slowly from the mid 1970s to 2006, apart from a few sharp increases when large areas were designated. This overall trend is similar to that described in Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008).
Almost all marine protected areas have been designated within Exclusive Economic Zones. A few have been declared in the high seas but they represent a small fraction of the total global marine protected area, only 4.4% (c. 530,000 km2). Thus, the annual rate of increase in cumulative protected area within Exclusive Economic Zones is virtually indistinguishable from the rate of increase of global marine protected area.
Fig. 1 shows the increase in the cumulative designated marine protected area since 1960 under various scenarios. Fig. 1a shows the observed increase and a projection of the annual rate of increase in global marine area protected, based on data for 1984–2006 (4.6%, r 2 = 0.96; Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008). Fig. 1b shows the trend derived from data assembled for this study and a projection based on the proposed marine protected areas in Table 1 (2015–2020; 4.5%, r 2 = 0.99). Figs 1a and 1b exhibit different trends; the discrepancy is attributable primarily to the addition of several large U.S. marine protected areas to the current database. These were established prior to 2006 but had not previously been considered to be marine protected areas. As permanent fisheries management measures established with the primary aim of protecting natural heritage, their inclusion in a marine protected area database is debatable (Spalding et al., Reference Spalding, Meliane, Milam, Fitzgerald, Hale, Chircop, Coffen-Smout and McConnell2013).
Fig. 1b also presents a possible scenario for a future increase in marine protected area coverage during 2015–2020, based on the proposed establishment of nine large marine protected areas within Exclusive Economic Zones (Table 1). If all of these marine protected areas were designated, protected area coverage within Exclusive Economic Zones would increase from 13.7 to 18.7 million km2, exceeding 10% coverage within areas under national jurisdiction and attaining protection of c. 5.1% of global ocean. A regression calculated for this time period yields an estimate of 4.5% annual increase (r 2 = 0.99). Figs 1c–e show how the addition of hypothetical marine protected areas would influence such estimates of global marine protected area and progress towards the 10% target.
Discussion
The designation of a marine protected area is one step towards effective protection but it alone is insufficient for conservation outcomes. Nonetheless, designated marine protected area provides a simple metric that is communicable and quantifiable, and it has thus been chosen by the international community as an indicator of conservation progress.
Our results show an improvement in progress towards meeting the 10% coverage aspect of Aichi Target 11. Since the results of Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) were presented, cumulative global marine protected area has increased fivefold, from 2.35 million km2 in 2006 to 11.9 million km2 in 2013. During 2014 this increased to > 14.2 million km2. This progress is attributable to the establishment of new marine protected areas (a few large sites in particular) and the inclusion of marine protected areas that were previously uncounted. Our results for total protected area for 2013 are similar to the cumulative coverage estimates of Spalding et al. (Reference Spalding, Meliane, Milam, Fitzgerald, Hale, Chircop, Coffen-Smout and McConnell2013), which are based on data from the World Database of Protected Areas (ProtectedPlanet, 2015) up to 2012, although larger (11.9 vs 8.3 million km2) because of the inclusion of extensive Australian marine protected areas designated during November 2012 and the U.S. fisheries management areas already mentioned.
The results also suggest a concomitant increase in designated no-take area during the same time period, from 0.08% (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) to 0.53% of the global ocean in 2013. This no-take coverage represents approximately one-sixth of the area within marine protected areas (1.9 million km2) in 2014, approximately one-third of which comprises a single marine protected area, the Chagos Marine Reserve. Although this increase represents a likely improvement in no-take coverage, it is not known to what extent these marine protected areas are managed and enforced as no-take areas.
The increase in marine protected area coverage is largely a result of the establishment of a small number of large marine protected areas, which tend to dominate areal statistics. Additional large marine protected areas are proposed for designation in the coming years (Table 1). As of June 2015 the British government had allocated budget for the Pitcairn marine protected area. If designated, the proposed sites (Table 1), all located within Exclusive Economic Zones, would add c. 4.5 million km2 to the 14.2 million km2 already protected globally. Distributing this area evenly across years from 2015 to 2020 equates to a growth rate of c. 4.5% annually, which is similar to the rate of 4.6% calculated by Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) for 1984–2006. The addition of the Pitcairn marine protected area to estimates of global no-take coverage would increase the area protected from extractive activities from 1.93 million km2 (in 2013) to 2.76 million km2.
Toonen et al. (Reference Toonen, Wilhelm, Maxwell, Wagner, Bowen and Sheppard2013) reported an annual rate of increase in marine protected area of 2.8% during 2006–2012, which is significantly slower than the rates calculated here for proposed increase in marine protected areas during 2015–2020 and those calculated by Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008) for 1984–2006. Nonetheless, Toonen et al. (Reference Toonen, Wilhelm, Maxwell, Wagner, Bowen and Sheppard2013) predicted that protection of 10% of the global ocean could be achieved by 2025. This is earlier than calculated here and discordant with the slower growth rate they reported.
Taking into account marine protected areas established since 2006 it is likely that 10% of areas under national jurisdiction are already protected. Yet protecting 10% of the global ocean remains out of reach. Assuming an annual growth rate of 4.5% could be maintained beyond 2020 (Fig. 1b), the 10% global protection target would be reached c. 2035. Thus although recent expansion in marine protected area has drawn the date of attainment closer compared to the 2067 prediction of Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Fish, Laughren and Pauly2008), it is still unlikely to be realized before 2020. What is striking is the extent to which marine protected area needs to expand to accommodate such a target. Furthermore, how long the current growth rate can be sustained remains to be seen; we might expect to see a declining trend in the rate of marine protected area establishment as marine areas residual to extractive uses and not already protected become rarer (Mora & Sale, Reference Mora and Sale2011; Devillers et al., Reference Devillers, Pressey, Grech, Kittinger, Edgar, Ward and Watson2015). The hypothetical future scenarios presented in Figs 1c and 1d suggest that vast areas of ocean will need to be protected to advance substantially towards 10% global coverage.
Up to mid 2014 the largest marine protected area established was the 1,070,000 km2 South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands marine protected area. Yet even with the establishment of a marine protected area in the Sargasso Sea, which could be almost four times that size, in addition to the nine proposed marine protected areas within Exclusive Economic Zones (Table 1) only 6.3% of the global ocean would be protected. Adding the 2.5 million km2 Arctic high seas area would increase global coverage by only 0.7%. However, adding the 35 million km2 Southern Ocean area managed by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources to calculations of global marine protected area coverage would expand global marine protected area to > 10%, although the addition of large areas such as this would not contribute to ecological representativeness, one of the other aspects of Aichi Target 11. This area of the Southern Ocean is already designated an IUCN category IV protected area (Day et al., Reference Day, Dudley, Hockings, Holmes, Laffoley, Stolton and Wells2012), and therefore its inclusion in the global marine protected area network would not mean any changes to its management, or improved protection for the marine environment. Closing the high seas to fishing would protect c. 60% of the global ocean area (Fig. 1) and is predicted to yield environmental, economic and social benefits (Sumaila et al., Reference Sumaila, Lam, Miller, Teh, Watson and Zeller2015).
It is clear that the designation of a few large marine protected areas has had a significant impact on the quantitative extent of marine protected areas globally but concerns have been raised about potential negative implications of their designation over the longer term (e.g. Agardy et al., Reference Agardy, Di Sciara and Christie2011; De Santo, Reference De Santo2013; OpenChannels, 2013). There is apprehension that they could amount to no more than paper parks, offering little, if any, protection in reality. Some scientists argue that the resource-limited nature of protected area implementation means we need to consider where the balance should fall between protection of remote, uncontested, intact areas and non-remote, exploited, imminently threatened locations, although this question has no immediate, science-based resolution. To others (Singleton & Roberts, Reference Singleton and Roberts2014; Wilhelm et al., Reference Wilhelm, Sheppard, Sheppard, Gaymer, Parks, Wagner and Lewis2014) it seems logical that all types of protection are necessary and we should not have to choose. Singleton & Roberts (Reference Singleton and Roberts2014) argue that debate about the best type of marine protected area clouds the primary message that needs to reach the public and policy-makers: the ocean needs greater protection than it receives now. Despite differences in opinion, a key principle can be agreed upon: siting and design of protected areas should prioritize ecological goals over political ones (Craigie et al., Reference Craigie, Pressey and Barnes2014; McCauley et al., Reference McCauley, Young, Power, Bird, Durham and McInturff2014).
Inevitably there are limitations to consider when interpreting the findings presented here. These limitations relate to the reliability of the data and the simplicity of marine protected area as a metric for biodiversity conservation. The quality of the global marine protected area dataset used here, and all large-scale protected area datasets, is influenced by the dynamic nature of protected areas (which are being designated and degazetted on an ongoing basis), ambiguity concerning inclusion and exclusion criteria, and the consistency and completeness of national and other data sources. It could be argued that some areas included in these calculations should have been excluded, and vice versa. The issue of what should be counted when quantifying marine protected area has been debated and there have been efforts by the IUCN to clarify the criteria (Dudley, Reference Dudley2008; Day et al., Reference Day, Dudley, Hockings, Holmes, Laffoley, Stolton and Wells2012; Eddy, Reference Eddy2013; Spalding et al., Reference Spalding, Meliane, Milam, Fitzgerald, Hale, Chircop, Coffen-Smout and McConnell2013). Aichi Target 11 also lacks a clear definition of ‘other effective area-based conservation measures’ (Woodley et al., Reference Woodley, Bertzky, Crawhall, Dudley, Londoño and MacKinnon2012) in addition to protected areas. This term is open to interpretation; for these areas to contribute effectively to measures of conservation progress a definition needs to be developed that does not dilute the intentions of the target.
Regarding the second limitation, marine protected area coverage is a simplified indicator of conservation success, which tells us little, if anything, about conservation outcomes (Gaston et al., Reference Gaston, Jackson, Cantú-Salazar and Cruz-Piñón2008). Coverage statistics hide shortcomings but also successes, such as heightened protection levels for marine protected areas that are already designated. At the Kermadec Islands, for example, a benthic protection area designated in 2007 covers the entire Exclusive Economic Zone but does not protect the water column (Eddy, Reference Eddy2013). There are plans to strengthen the level of protection to a no-take area (Table 1; the area up to 12 nautical miles (22 km) from the coastline is already designated as no-take), although this would not affect estimates of global marine protected area coverage.
To understand and gauge fully the effectiveness of marine protected areas on a global scale we need to look beyond the number of square kilometres protected and provide an alternative metric for conservation success (Singleton & Roberts, Reference Singleton and Roberts2014). Developing and refining methods for assessing additional aspects of marine protected area implementation (protection level, management activities and conservation outcomes) will contribute to understanding global progress towards meeting international targets, but more importantly to understanding the role of marine protected areas in conserving biodiversity. As we make progress towards meeting the target of 10% coverage and look towards 30% no-take coverage these methods will provide a way to advance beyond quantitative goals and ensure the additional stipulations of Aichi Target 11 are met, so that what has been designated contributes to successful conservation outcomes.
Acknowledgements
This is a contribution of Sea Around Us, a scientific collaboration at the University of British Columbia funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts and the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation. We thank Clarissa Theriault and Ashley McCrea-Strub for their assistance in preparation of the data for this research, and Chris Hoornaert for his help with some spatial analyses.
Biographical sketches
Lisa Boonzaier manages a small team of communications specialists at the Save Our Seas Foundation. She is particularly interested in the intersection of media and science, and helping scientists to convey their findings to the public. Daniel Pauly is devoted to studying, documenting and promoting policies to mitigate the impact of fisheries on the world's marine ecosystems. The concepts, methods and software he (co-)developed are used throughout the world, in particular the Ecopath modelling approach and software (www.ecopath.org) and FishBase, the online encyclopedia of fishes (www.fishbase.org).