James Cook University

11/23/2022 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/23/2022 16:45

Call for harder line on how we judge conservation

James Cook University scientists say a more direct approach should be taken to conservation planning - with greater focus on the real impact of conservation actions and less attention paid to targets or actions that misrepresent progress.

Dr Patrick Smallhorn-West is a Research Fellow at JCU's ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies. In a recent article he said that conservation only functions by changing human actions, so if conservationists make choices that avoid interfering with human damage to nature, they are also necessarily limiting their impact.

"For example, marine protected areas can incur costs to fishers, and national parks can incur lost opportunities for agriculture, mining, logging, or grazing," said Dr Smallhorn-West.

"Controlling these activities therefore carries political and societal costs. But fishing, agriculture, and mining are also some of the key activities affecting nature."

He said much of conservation planning and research focuses on minimising the costs incurred by fishing, logging, and mining.

"But this widespread emphasis on minimising costs has resulted in the paradoxical development of conservation goals with little actual impact for nature," said Dr Smallhorn-West.

He said one example of this was the 2004 rezoning of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, which increased highly protected areas from 4.6 per cent to 33.3 per cent of the Park, but still only reduced the extent of business-as-usual trawling by less than 5 per cent and areas trawled more than once by less than 1 per cent.

This same pattern followed the 2018 design of Australia's National system of Marine Protected Areas, where high protection was greatest in deep water (>500 m), and had negligible overlap with pelagic longlining areas (0.4%) or trawling grounds (0.1%), and only limited fishing by 1 per cent and petroleum extraction by 4.5 per cent.He said the results < /a>aren't limited to Australia - globally, the largest 10 marine protected areas, collectively making up 53 per cent of the world's coverage and whose main purpose is to limit fishing, are almost all situated in remote areas that already have low levels of fishing.

Dr Smallhorn-West said if these vast conservation networks fail to change any present-day actions, then the question needs to be asked about what exactly they are meant to achieve.

"We understand that nature conservation is only one of society's values, and hence needs to be balanced with other things we hold dear. But if we accept that preserving nature through reduced resource consumption is a goal of conservation, then we must also accept that minimising costs will also minimise impact.

He said there should be a change in the language of conservation to focus explicitly on the differences conservation actions make, with more value assigned to their practical impact.

"The value we attribute to a conservation action should be correlated to the extent to which it changes human actions - after all, if human impacts were not causing harm to nature, then nature conservation would not be necessary," said Dr Smallhorn-West.

"Put another way, the predominant question should be 'how much does/will this intervention change what people are doing'? This would extend the idea through society that conservation is about giving something up, while balancing these societal values with others such as reducing poverty and inequalities."

He said organisations, governments, and other bodies promoting examples of easy conservation wins with minimal disruption of present-day actions should be viewed with caution.

"The only chance these projects have of achieving impact is by their potential effects of future human actions, which is problematic in three ways: first, it lets business as usual continue in areas needing protection; second, it passes the responsibility for change onto future generations; and third, there is always the possibility of conservation programs being cancelled in the future. We need to act now.

"Making the language used to communicate conservation progress, targets, and planning more honest and more explicitly focused on the differences our actions make will help to realign our efforts with the effective preservation of nature," said Dr Smallhorn-West.

Paper available here.