Marine Protected Areas: Lessons from Costa Rica and Tanzania

Both Tanzania’s and Costa Rica’s beaches provide important nesting sites for endangered sea turtles. Poaching of eggs by local people for food or for sale presents a major threat to these species, as do other predators. This harvesting of eggs in MPAs, and throughout Costa Rica, remains illegal, but enforcement on long beaches proves difficult. Both countries have active organizations that attempt to reduce this poaching, sometimes involving moving nests. The Tanzanian NGO Sea Sense works directly with local communities to increase knowledge and to provide cash from tourist viewing of hatchlings to local communities to generate incentives to refrain from harvesting eggs. Similarly, but on a much larger scale, Tortuguero National Park in Costa Rica manages a guide system that provides employment to local people while maintaining controls on the number and behavior of tourists watching turtles hatch or lay eggs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heidi J., Albers, Róger, Madrigal, Stephen, Kirama, Razack, Lokina, Aloyce, Hepelwa, Elizabeth J Z, Robinson, Jane, Turpie, Alpízar, Francisco 415, CATIE - Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza.
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:spa
Published: Turrialba (Costa Rica) CATIE 2015
Subjects:AREAS MARINAS PROTEGIDAS, TANZANIA, TORTUGAS MARINAS, ESPECIES EN PELIGRO DE EXTINCION, CAZA FURTIVA, CONSERVACION, DESARROLLO SOSTENIBLE, TURISMO, ENCUESTAS,
Online Access:https://repositorio.bibliotecaorton.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9561
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Summary:Both Tanzania’s and Costa Rica’s beaches provide important nesting sites for endangered sea turtles. Poaching of eggs by local people for food or for sale presents a major threat to these species, as do other predators. This harvesting of eggs in MPAs, and throughout Costa Rica, remains illegal, but enforcement on long beaches proves difficult. Both countries have active organizations that attempt to reduce this poaching, sometimes involving moving nests. The Tanzanian NGO Sea Sense works directly with local communities to increase knowledge and to provide cash from tourist viewing of hatchlings to local communities to generate incentives to refrain from harvesting eggs. Similarly, but on a much larger scale, Tortuguero National Park in Costa Rica manages a guide system that provides employment to local people while maintaining controls on the number and behavior of tourists watching turtles hatch or lay eggs.