Well said Phill.
The uneducated and uninformed can easily be sucked into thinking that marine parks are the panacea to all ills in the ocean, when in fact they clearly are not.
They do not address the biggest threats in most areas, which are not fishing activities, but are things like water quality, pollution, rubbish finding its way into waterways, poor farming practices, introduced species and the pressures of urban environment.
I am also amazed at how many people continue to fall for the BS put about by the extreme greenies that we Australian fishers should be happy about more no fishing zones because they make our fisheries more sustainable. What rubbish!
If that was the case, then our marine parks would be designed, managed and operated by the Government departments that are actually responsible for fisheries management, wouldn't they! But they aren't, are they! They are done by the National Parks or Environment Departments, and they rarely if ever take any notice of the Fisheries managers in their own governments.
I have asked marine parks proponents on many occasions how they take into account the existing fisheries management regimes before declaring new no-fishing zones in marine parks Never got a straight, sensible answer to that question yet. So as a result we have a lack of integration between different legislation and end up with unnecessary over regulation and more restrictions than are justified.
i have also asked them to show me where and how they did the risk assessment of each specific type of fishing activity (eg line fishing, trolling, lure casting being 3 different types of fishing activity) and how they arrived at the determination that each of those types of fishing posed an unacceptable risk to the values they were trying to protect in each zone.
You guessed it, no risk assessment, or at best a cursory one, was ever done, and key users certainly not consulted or engaged properly in doing that assessment. This flies in the face of the relevant international conventions that underpin marine parks worldwide.
Multi-use marine parks have a definite place in Australia. But to be effective, the restrictions in various zones need to clearly address well defined threats. In simple terms, they need to be very clear about what the problem/s are that the marine park is going to address, and then make sure that the measures that they put in place actually address those problems, and avoid targeting anything else.
And when it comes to fishing sustainability, before they do any fishing restrictions as part of a marine park regime, they need to ask the fisheries management experts if there are better ways of achieving the same sustainability outcome using other means.
If they do that, they will get a lot more support from well informed fishers around Australia.