Marine Protected Areas Content
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Marine Protected Areas Content for UC DavisenDo Marine Protected Areas Work?
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<p>Marine protected areas, or MPAs, are an increasingly common way of protecting marine ecosystems by prohibiting fishing in specific locations. However, many people remain skeptical that MPAs actually benefit fish populations, and there has not yet been a way to demonstrate whether or not they are effective. Until now.</p>July 17, 2019 - 10:43amKatherine E Kerlin/climate/news/do-marine-protected-areas-workShark Park
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<p>North America鈥檚 biggest marine protected area 鈥� Mexico鈥檚 Revillagigedo National Park 鈥� may have been nearly seven times smaller if not for shark-tracking data collected by researchers and alumni from the University of California, Davis.</p>
<p>The park, known as the 鈥淕alapagos of North America,鈥� protects more than 57,000 square miles around the Revillagigedo Archipelago, a UNESCO World Heritage site composed of a string of four volcanic islands about 300 miles southwest of the Baja Peninsula.</p>July 19, 2018 - 4:28pmKatherine E Kerlin/climate/news/shark-parkMarine Reserves a Solution to Bycatch Problem in Oceans
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<p>Commercial fishermen may be able to catch more of the profitable fish they want with marine reserves than without them, according to a study in the journal <em>PNAS</em> led by the University of California, Davis. Using marine reserves as a management tool could also help the recently rebounded West Coast groundfish fishery sustain itself, the study notes.</p>
<p>Marine reserves are a subset of Marine Protected Areas. Some MPAs allow fishing, but marine reserves are areas of the ocean closed to fishing and other extractive activities.</p>August 07, 2017 - 1:30pmKatherine E Kerlin/news/marine-reserves-solution-bycatch-problem-oceans