Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and Security, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2022 Apr;36(2):e13800. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13800. Epub 2021 Aug 3.
Community-level resource management efforts are cornerstones in ensuring sustainable use of natural resources. Yet, understanding how community characteristics influence management practices remains contested. With a sample size of ≥725 communities, we assessed the effects of key community (i.e., socioeconomic) characteristics (human population size and density, market integration, and modernization) on the probability of occurrence of fisheries management practices, including gear, species, and spatial restrictions. The study was based in Solomon Islands, a Pacific Island country with a population that is highly dependent on coastal fisheries. People primarily dwell in small communities adjacent to the coastline dispersed across 6 island provinces and numerous smaller islands. We used nationally collected data in binomial logistic regression models to examine the likelihood of management occurrence, given socioeconomic context of communities. In contrast to prevailing views, we identified a positive and statistically significant association between both human population size and market integration and all 3 management practices. Human population density, however, had a statistically significant negative association and modernization a varied and limited association with occurrence of all management practices. Our method offers a way to remotely predict the occurrence of resource management practices based on key socioeconomic characteristics. It could be used to improve understanding of why some communities conduct natural resource management activities when statistical patterns suggest they are not likely to and thus improve understanding of how some communities of people beat the odds despite limited market access and high population density.
社区层面的资源管理工作是确保自然资源可持续利用的基石。然而,理解社区特征如何影响管理实践仍然存在争议。本研究以所罗门群岛为案例,该岛国人口高度依赖沿海渔业。在所罗门群岛,我们使用二项逻辑回归模型,基于全国性收集的数据,在给定社区社会经济背景的情况下,检验了管理实践发生的可能性。与普遍观点相反,我们发现人口规模和市场一体化与所有 3 种管理实践均呈正相关且具有统计学意义。然而,人口密度与所有管理实践的发生均呈负相关,而现代化与所有管理实践的发生呈多样化且有限的关联。我们的方法提供了一种基于关键社会经济特征远程预测资源管理实践发生的方法。它可以用于更好地理解为什么一些社区开展自然资源管理活动,而根据统计模式,这些社区不太可能开展此类活动,从而有助于理解尽管市场准入有限且人口密度较高,为什么一些社区仍然能够克服困难。