Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand

There is considerable interest in New Zealand in establishing “Customary Management Areas” (taiāpure and mātaitai) and Marine Reserves to support Māori cultural practices and restore declining biodiversity and fish stocks. Allocation of near-shore marine areas for these management systems potentiall...

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Main Authors: Sophal Chhun, Paul Thorsnes, Henrik Moller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-09-01
Series:Resources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/2/3/406
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spelling doaj-c40ab55810cc40dd9ae8034c7e78c6e52020-11-25T00:53:09ZengMDPI AGResources2079-92762013-09-012340643810.3390/resources2030406Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New ZealandSophal ChhunPaul ThorsnesHenrik MollerThere is considerable interest in New Zealand in establishing “Customary Management Areas” (taiāpure and mātaitai) and Marine Reserves to support Māori cultural practices and restore declining biodiversity and fish stocks. Allocation of near-shore marine areas for these management systems potentially benefits the larger public, but it has often been vigorously opposed by recreational and commercial fishers. This paper reports estimates of the relative values held by the public toward four potentially conflicting uses of near-shore marine areas. These estimates come from a web-based choice survey completed by 1055 respondents recruited from throughout New Zealand. The response rate was especially high at 60%. We present results weighted to the characteristics of the population and test the results against a variety of well-known sources of survey bias. Scenario development suggests that some reallocation of near-shore marine areas to any of the management systems under discussion alternative to the status quo is likely to yield a welfare gain. A combination of marine reserves and taiāpure is most preferred. The exercise supports the use of discrete choice experiments to provide crucial information about difficult-to-quantify public values for aspects of management of near-shore marine areas, such as proposed taiāpure, mātaitai, or marine reserves.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/2/3/406ecosystem service valuationchoice experimentmarine spatial allocationfisheriespublic good
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophal Chhun
Paul Thorsnes
Henrik Moller
spellingShingle Sophal Chhun
Paul Thorsnes
Henrik Moller
Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
Resources
ecosystem service valuation
choice experiment
marine spatial allocation
fisheries
public good
author_facet Sophal Chhun
Paul Thorsnes
Henrik Moller
author_sort Sophal Chhun
title Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
title_short Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
title_full Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
title_fullStr Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Preferences for Management of Near-Shore Marine Ecosystems: A Choice Experiment in New Zealand
title_sort preferences for management of near-shore marine ecosystems: a choice experiment in new zealand
publisher MDPI AG
series Resources
issn 2079-9276
publishDate 2013-09-01
description There is considerable interest in New Zealand in establishing “Customary Management Areas” (taiāpure and mātaitai) and Marine Reserves to support Māori cultural practices and restore declining biodiversity and fish stocks. Allocation of near-shore marine areas for these management systems potentially benefits the larger public, but it has often been vigorously opposed by recreational and commercial fishers. This paper reports estimates of the relative values held by the public toward four potentially conflicting uses of near-shore marine areas. These estimates come from a web-based choice survey completed by 1055 respondents recruited from throughout New Zealand. The response rate was especially high at 60%. We present results weighted to the characteristics of the population and test the results against a variety of well-known sources of survey bias. Scenario development suggests that some reallocation of near-shore marine areas to any of the management systems under discussion alternative to the status quo is likely to yield a welfare gain. A combination of marine reserves and taiāpure is most preferred. The exercise supports the use of discrete choice experiments to provide crucial information about difficult-to-quantify public values for aspects of management of near-shore marine areas, such as proposed taiāpure, mātaitai, or marine reserves.
topic ecosystem service valuation
choice experiment
marine spatial allocation
fisheries
public good
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/2/3/406
work_keys_str_mv AT sophalchhun preferencesformanagementofnearshoremarineecosystemsachoiceexperimentinnewzealand
AT paulthorsnes preferencesformanagementofnearshoremarineecosystemsachoiceexperimentinnewzealand
AT henrikmoller preferencesformanagementofnearshoremarineecosystemsachoiceexperimentinnewzealand
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