Ocean protection quality is lagging behind quantity: Applying a scientific framework to assess real marine protected area progress against the 30 by 30 target

Author:

Pike Elizabeth P.1ORCID,MacCarthy Jessica M. C.1ORCID,Hameed Sarah O.1ORCID,Harasta Nikki1ORCID,Grorud‐Colvert Kirsten2ORCID,Sullivan‐Stack Jenna2ORCID,Claudet Joachim3ORCID,Horta e Costa Barbara4ORCID,Gonçalves Emanuel J.56ORCID,Villagomez Angelo7ORCID,Morgan Lance1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Marine Conservation Institute Seattle Washington USA

2. Department of Integrative Biology Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

3. National Center for Scientific Research PSL Université Paris, CRIOBE, CNRS‐EPHE‐UPVD Paris France

4. CCMAR – Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus Gambelas Faro Portugal

5. Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre (MARE), Ispa – Instituto Universitário Lisbon Portugal

6. Oceano Azul Foundation, Oceanário de Lisboa Lisbon Portugal

7. Center for American Progress Washington DC USA

Abstract

AbstractThe international community set a global conservation target to protect at least 30% of the ocean by 2030 (“30 × 30”) to reverse biodiversity loss, including through marine protected areas (MPAs). However, varied MPAs result in significantly different conservation outcomes, making MPA coverage alone an inadequate metric. We used The MPA Guide framework to assess the the world's largest 100 MPAs by area, representing nearly 90% of reported global MPA coverage and 7.3% of the global ocean area, and analyzed the distribution of MPA quality across political and ecological regions. A quarter of the assessed MPA coverage is not implemented, and one‐third is incompatible with the conservation of nature. Two factors contribute to this outcome: (1) many reported MPAs lack regulations or management, and (2) some MPAs allow high‐impact activities. Fully and highly protected MPAs account for one‐third of the assessed area but are unevenly distributed across ecoregions in part because some nations have designated large, highly protected MPAs in their overseas or remote territories. Indicators of MPA quality, not only coverage, are needed to ensure a global network of MPAs that covers at least 30% of the ocean and effectively safeguards representative marine ecosystems from destructive human activities.

Publisher

Wiley

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