Friday
12, September
2003 Highlights
Other
Daily Reports:
Monday
08 Sep. 2003 // Tuesday
09 Sep. 2003 // Wednesday
10 Sep. 2003 //
Thursday 11 Sep. 2003 // Friday
12 Sep. 2003 // Saturday
13 Sep. 2003 //
Tuesday 16 Sep. 2003 // Wednesday
17 Sep. 2003 /
Final Summary

Friday
12 September
2003 :
World Heritage // Marine
Protected Areas // Evaluating
Management Effectiveness
IISD
Report // PDF
Version // Programme
of the Day // Today's
Photogallery
Participants at the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress
(WPC) met in seven workshop streams to address: linkages in
the landscape and seascape; building broader support for protected
areas (PAs); PA governance; developing the capacity to manage
PAs; evaluating management effectiveness; building a secure
financial future; and building comprehensive PA systems. All
workshop streams held concurrent break-out sessions throughout
the day. Side meetings, special events and discussion groups
on WPC recommendations were also held.
This
report focuses on selected sessions addressing: Communities
and Equity; Marine Protected Areas (MPAs);
and Evaluating Management Effectiveness.
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COMMUNITIES AND EQUITY
Governance //
Building a Secure Financial Future
PA
GOVERNANCE: Community
Conserved Areas: Panel on issues of governance and state
recognition: Neema Pathak, Kalpavriksh,
introduced the panel. Highlighting the recognition in Australia
of indigenous people’s capacity to establish their own
PAs, Chels Marshall, Nambucca Community Negotiations, outlined
the conditions of, and process for, declaring an indigenous,
community-governed PA. John Chester, Aboriginal Lands Trust,
presented the Nantawarrina indigenous PA in Australia, which
is governed by a community council and an aboriginal land trust,
noting its successes regarding environmental restoration and
economic stability.
Inayat
Ali, Shimshal
community representative, spoke of the Shimshal community
in Pakistan, stressing: local ethics of
nature stewardship; threats to the community’s livelihood
by externally-established national parks; and the Shimshal
Nature Trust, which formalizes community nature stewardship
efforts.

Rodolfo
Aguilar,
Coron Island representative, and David de Vera, Philippine
Association for Intercultural Development,
presented the Coron Island case in the Philippines, underscoring
conflicts with the local government and the community’s
success in obtaining legal recognition of their rights over
ancestral lands and waters.
Dermot
Smyth, James Cook University, Australia, called for
trusting indigenous structures and stewardship systems. Ken
Macdonald, University of Toronto, Canada, stressed that PAs
can be as much a threat as a promise. Participants discussed
the interlinkage between environment and cultural values, and
the variety of livelihood models described as community conservation
areas.
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BUILDING
A SECURE FINANCIAL FUTURE: Communities’ role
in sustainable PA financing: Smyth introduced the panel. Presenting
on community benefits and revenues from PAs in Nepal, Krishna
Oli, Forum for Promotion of Environmental Law and Justice,
outlined relevant legislation, financial support from donor
agencies, and evolving community management systems. Gehendra
Gurung, King Mahendra Trust for Nature Conservation, presented
case studies on the management of non-timber forest products
and revenue generation, underscoring the importance of awareness
raising, community participation, and transparency in income
and benefit sharing.
Marshall and Chester addressed indigenous PAs in Australia.
Marshall outlined: funding from Environment Australia and other
partners; a community development employment programme; and
revenue from tourism and pastoralism. Chester highlighted the
strong economy of the Nantawarrina indigenous PA, noting development
of cultural tourism and benefits related to employment, youth
training and capacity building.
Oscar
Castillo, Kaa-Iya National Park, Bolivia, said that the park was established
as proposed by the region’s
indigenous people. He said that an international NGO and the
Bolivian government established a trust fund to provide sustainable
funding for the indigenous PA, by developing a partnership
with gas companies. He underscored the need for legitimacy,
governance and long-term, large-scale management schemes.

Fanny
N’golo, Côte d’Ivoire, described how
pilot projects on community-based natural resource and wildlife
management in Côte d’Ivoire are funded through
a foundation, financed by the GEF and other donors, the board
of which represents private and public interests.
Altaf
Hussain, WWF, introduced conservation funds and community
financing projects in Northern Pakistan, describing their local
structure and management to, inter alia: promote ecotourism
and research; implement conservation plans; and follow court
cases regarding poaching.
Gurung presented the Annapoorna Conservation Area project
in Nepal, noting that it achieved sustainability through the
generation of internal income from: earmarking entry fees for
management; collecting fees on timber and non-timber forest
products use; the commercial use of natural resources; and
intellectual property rights.
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MARINE
PROTECTED AREAS
Linkages
in the Landscape/Seascape // Governance
LINKAGES
IN THE LANDSCAPE AND SEASCAPE: Benefits of MPA networks
for fisheries and endangered species: Ghislaine Llewellyn,
WWF, and Kerry Marshall, New Zealand Conservation Authority,
co-chaired the session. Presenting on the effects of MPAs on
fisheries, Callum Roberts, University of York, UK, noted that
MPAs help increasing overall catches, and that protecting 20-40%
of the seascape would maximize fishery benefits.
Describing global trade in marine aquarium organisms, Rezal
Kusumaatmadja, Hawaii Marine Aquarium Council, discussed trade-based
incentives for establishing MPAs, and advocated a certification
scheme for aquarium organisms.
Carlos
Moreno, University of Chile, presented MPAs as a tool
for fisheries conservation in Chile, highlighting the management
areas system, in which a fisherman is allocated a specific
area to manage according to a plan approved by national authorities.
Noting that Vietnam
follows a nature-based economic development model and that
fisheries contributed to a doubling of the gross
domestic product, Chu Hoi Nguyen, Vietnamese Ministry of Fisheries,
introduced his country’s efforts to create a representative
MPA system. He identified increasing inshore fisheries and
destructive fishing practices as main threats to marine biodiversity,
and said that challenges include a weak legal and institutional
framework.

Gary
Larson, Bahamas National Trust, outlined MPA network
development in the Bahamas, highlighting local commitment,
eco-tourism benefits, increased fisheries yields around MPAs,
and endangered species protection.
Participants discussed: stock assessments; endangered species
recovery; trade control by importing countries; incentives
for MPA establishment; and raising local community awareness.
Roger
McManus, IUCN, stressed the need to shatter the myth
that marine species are abundant, cannot go extinct, and recover
rapidly from exploitation, and called for: expanding the red
list of marine species; identifying conservation priorities;
accelerating data assessment; and setting an agenda and schedule
for establishing domestic and international MPAs.
Filemon
Romero, Mindanao State University, the Philippines,
introduced joint efforts with Malaysia to create the transboundary
Turtle Islands Heritage PA. He highlighted the development
of a joint management plan, joint research programmes and ecotourism
guidelines, and said challenges include: information gaps;
inadequate human and financial capacity; and managing impacts
on local communities.
Mabel
Augustowski, World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA),
presented on MPA management, species conservation programmes
and the ecosystem approach, noting that ecosystem-based management
is adaptive, drives inter-agency cooperation, and considers
human values.
Benjamin
Kahn, IUCN, described management activities in the
Indo-Pacific marine corridors of Indonesia. Advocating a site-based
and multi-species habitat approach, he noted that challenges
include: data deficiencies; the absence of legislation in adjacent
high seas; and implications of traditional whaling practices.
Participants discussed monitoring traditional catch; religious
reasons for not acknowledging extinction threats, and protecting
migratory routes.
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PA
GOVERNANCE: MPAs and sustainable fisheries: Wendy
Craik,
Australian Fisheries Management Authority, chaired the session.
Presenting on local communities, MPAs and fisheries in Tanzania,
Eric Verheij, IUCN, described a case of MPA establishment through
a participatory process, concluding that community involvement
in management, monitoring and enforcement has measurable positive
impacts.
Drawing on the European experience, Despina
Symons, European
Bureau of Conservation and Development, stressed that MPA establishment
without stakeholder participation is counter-productive, and
called for accountability, transparency, partnerships and cooperation
between ministries.
Etty
Agoes, Ministry
of Marine Affairs and Fisheries of Indonesia, presented her
country’s experience, stressing the value
of strong political will, and highlighting some impediments,
including: limited domestic resources; powerful vested interests;
development needs; and restricted access to resources in MPAs.
Rebecca
Lent, US
National Marine Fisheries Service, described the US area-based
management of living marine resources, highlighting
area and time closures. She noted challenges, including: enforcement;
understanding fisheries’ dynamics; and constituency resistance.
Participants discussed: the need to clarify the difference
between MPAs and fishery management areas; the concept of local
communities and stakeholders; and regional cooperation for
management.
A panel consisting
of Charles Atkins, Irvin and Johnson Fishing Company, South
Africa, Donna Petrachenko, Canadian Department
of Oceans and Fisheries, and the speakers further discussed
the session’s topic.
They addressed:
including non-representative and other marine areas in WPC
recommendations; making MPA benefits available
to fishermen and compensating them for closures; involving
the fisheries sector in decision making; specifying the legal
implications of MPA establishment; enforcing legislation; assessing
fisheries’ impact at the ecosystem level; using environmental
indicators to assess the state of world marine protection;
and expanding the FAO code of conduct for fisheries.
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EVALUATING MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
Assessing Ecological Integrity: Nik
Lopoukhine, Director General,
Parks Canada, and Jeffrey Parrish, The Nature Conservancy,
chaired the session. Lopoukhine presented on the concept of
ecological integrity (EI). He stressed that, because PAs are
part of a greater ecosystem and are affected by activities
in their surroundings, measuring their EI extends beyond park
management interests. He said that achieving biodiversity conservation
requires EI. Parrish noted that EI evaluation is an under-addressed
aspect of PA management effectiveness, and that its benefits
include: identifying threats to conservation targets; setting
quantifiable objectives to measure progress; developing and
prioritizing monitoring plans; identifying data gaps; and raising
awareness on the status of the natural world. He noted that
EI evaluation requires the identification of focal species,
key attributes and indicators, and stressed the need to rate
indicator status and to integrated ratings into EI assessment.
Stephen
Woodley,
Parks Canada, emphasized the need to understand PA ecosystems
and identify vital components of EI. He outlined
a measurement system based on several indicators that capture
biodiversity, ecosystem function and stressors, and emphasized
the need to monitor and manage PAs at multiple spatial and
temporal scales. He noted the importance of communicating results
to PA managers and to the public. Roger Sayre, The Nature Conservancy,
and LeAnne Alonso, Conservation International, presented on
measuring EI in remote areas where data is lacking. Alonso
described the Rapid Assessment Programme, which measures biodiversity
in terrestrial, aquatic and marine areas in order to highlight
conservation priorities. Sayre outlined the Rapid Ecological
Assessment, an accelerated survey of landscapes, their biodiversity,
existing threats, and long-term viability. Regarding the techniques’ utility
for measuring EI, he said they help to identify baseline targets,
key ecological attributes, and indicators and their natural
variation.

Unsustainable hunting
for subsistence and trade: Chair Elizabeth Bennet, Wildlife
Conservation Society (WCS), presented on hunting
in tropical forest PAs. Noting that hunting practices in most
tropical PAs are no longer sustainable and that PAs are becoming "empty
forests," she said reasons include: population increase;
isolation of PAs; modern weaponry; commercialized hunting;
and political instability.
Tom
Milliken, TRAFFIC, presented a study on bush meat carried
out in the East Southern African region. Noting that a broad
cross-section of society is involved in the wildlife meat business,
he stressed the need for legal and sustainable alternative
sources of protein.
Melvin
Gumal, WCS, described actions taken by a pro-conservation
local government to reduce hunting pressures in Malaysia, including:
restrictions on gun and cartridge ownership; a wildlife trade
ban; enforcement; education; community participation; and tourism
promotion. Antoine Moukassa, WCS, described hunting consessions
in the buffer zone surrounding a PA in the Republic of Congo,
including seasonal hunting zones for nomadic and local people,
and fully protected zones.
Helder
Lima de Queiroz,
Mamiraua Institute, presented on options for managing hunting
on Mamirauá and Aman sustainable
development reserves in the Amazon State, Brazil.
David
Kpelle, Conservation International, presented on the
use of traditional belief systems in reducing bush meat hunting
in Ghana. He recommended: the revision of wildlife laws to
recognize the role of traditional belief systems; improving
the capacity of traditional authorities; education and awareness
campaigns; and building partnerships with, inter alia, the
media and research institutes.
Callum
Roberts, University of York, UK, outlined lessons from
fisheries, including the need for an ecosystem approach and
no-take zones.
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Day
by Day 8-17 September 2003
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