2. How did the Amazon Regional Protected Areas (ARPA) benefit traditional communities in the Amazon?
Returning benefits to the people who rely on an area's resources are crucial for a protected area to succeed. In some areas, traditional communities had sole access to the land or retained fishing and hunting rights that were otherwise regulated. Families also gained access to government programs that provided conditional cash transfers and rewards for following management plans and enforcing regulations.
Lastly, we were successful because of the vast system of protected areas. Rather than implementing individual parks or reserves, we looked at the landscape as a whole while designing the system of protected areas.
3. How will you replicate the lessons you learned in the Amazon in your marine management plans?
In marine management, as with the Amazon, we will look at traditional community needs first; biodiversity opportunities second; and finally, the needs of the extractive or fishing industries. This gives secure access to communities without handicapping ecosystem productivity or the private sector’s returns to the economy. This way we harmonize production and protection.
Also, we are taking a "seascape" approach that is similar to what we did in the Amazon. This means looking outside the borders of the protected area, at the interactions between land and water use within and beyond the borders of the protected area.
4. In what ways is marine management fundamentally different from land management?
For one, we know far less about marine ecosystems than we do about forests. Mapping biodiversity hotspots is much harder and much more expensive in the ocean than it is on land.
The greatest difference is in enforcement. Some of the Amazon protected areas are so large, they are bigger than countries. Marine spaces are even larger. In the Amazon, enforcement is done by local populations or experts on foot, by car or boat or via aerial surveillance with borders marked with simple signs. In the ocean, enforcement must happen by power-boat, which is more expensive and labor intensive.
It is also harder to define the limits in a marine habitat. Land areas have natural and traditional boundaries such as rivers and when necessary we can easily put up signs. In the ocean, borders must be marked with buoys anchored to the seafloor, which, as you can imagine, is technically complicated.
Only 1.57% of Brazil’s seaboard territory is currently a protected area. The new project aims to expand coverage to 120,000 km2 of new territory, and help preserve a coastal zone that is one of the world’s richest and most diverse. Protected areas—which now cover around 15% of the planet’s land and 3% of its ocean—are an important tool for better resource management. As World Bank experience in Brazil has shown, protected areas can help preserve natural resources and boost the livelihoods of local communities.
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