Abstract

Natural disasters have altered the landscape of Montserrat’s marine environment significantly over the past 30 years, forcing rapid adaptation of marine species and the human population that relies upon them. Volcanic activity has led to an abundance of volcanic sediment, which has seen rise to the expansion of the island’s sand mining and aggregate industry. Similarly, a series of volcanic eruptions has resulted in smothered fishing grounds and maritime exclusion zones, increasing the pressure on the remaining accessible marine environment. Recent increases in shipping activity, due to the expanding aggregate sector, partnered with a lack of official marine spatial planning, has led to the west coast of the island becoming a stakeholder conflict hotspot. Regular interactions between fishing gear and shipping vessels were resulting in damaged and lost fish pots and causing physical damage and increased ghost-fishing on the coral reefs, with additional impacts on fisher livelihoods. This paper builds upon earlier work in Montserrat to engage fishers in fisheries data collection programmes. Here we use data from Montserrat’s fishing fleet to understand the distribution and intensity of fish pot activity within the conflict area. Maximum activity was distributed along the edge of the reef front, near the drop-off, with the greatest intensity toward the south. These data, and outcomes from stakeholder consultation, have allowed the relevant authorities and decision-makers to identify a suitable shipping route that avoids pot-based fishing grounds, while remaining as close inshore as feasible, to avoid unnecessary fuel costs for shipping vessels. As a result, the Montserrat Port Authority has implemented a restricted area around the identified fishing grounds, in which commercial vessels are not allowed to transit. This intervention represents a “win-win” solution, reducing the risk of commercial vessel-fishing gear conflict in the southwestern pot-based fishing grounds, without substantially increasing the burden of excess travel on commercial vessels. Here we show how engagement with the fishing community and voluntary participation in data collection has supported a conflict resolution deemed suitable to both parties; allowing the needs of the smaller traditional fishing sector to influence management of the rapidly expanding, high value aggregate sector.

Highlights

  • The “Emerald Isle of the Caribbean,” Montserrat, is a biodiverse, volcanic and mountainous small-island nation that is highly dependent on the marine environment for food, commercial fisheries, tourism, disaster resilience and commercial exports, such as aggregates

  • Since 2016, a Memorandum of Understanding has been in place between JNCC (Joint Nature Conservation Committee) and the Government of Montserrat to provide technical assistance to formulate a data infrastructure appropriate to the island’s needs; to support it’s marine and terrestrial spatial planning in the context of environmental management and socio-economic development; to improve the legal framework for sustainable management and use of the ocean resources, and to formulate a strategy to implement marine spatial planning

  • Stakeholders agreed that the current activity with the greatest potential environmental and economic impacts, with no intervention currently in place, was the vessel-gear interactions between Montserrat’s pot fishery and aggregate shipping vessels along the western coast

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Summary

Introduction

The “Emerald Isle of the Caribbean,” Montserrat, is a biodiverse, volcanic and mountainous small-island nation that is highly dependent on the marine environment for food, commercial fisheries, tourism, disaster resilience and commercial exports, such as aggregates. The marine landscape of Montserrat has been significantly impacted by natural disasters including volcanic activity and hurricanes. Volcanic activity destroyed the capital city, Plymouth, and placed twothirds of the island off limits (Myers, 2013). These eruptions have led to high outward migration, of the economically active population and saw substantial contraction (∼65%) in the tourism sector due to safety concerns (Oxford Policy Management (OPM), 2011). In Montserrat, this has been compounded by the impacts of natural disasters such as habitat degradation and smothering and the introduction of maritime exclusion zones around the southern two-thirds of the island (Montserrat Volcano Authority (MVO), 2018)

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