Hi Mike,
I will start by saying that I have very little time for snapshot science,
for instance my work once took me to a remote central Australian
billabong, where quite by chance I got to witness thousands of
pelicans hearding schools of tiny fish into the shallows. This was
a truly once in a lifetime sight, as I rushed back the next day with
camera in hand and not one pelican remained.
Now onto the issue of no take zones, James Cook University has just
released the results of its latest surveys of GBR zones closed in 2004.
They claim that in two years, there has been an increase in the
number of coral trout, in the range of %60. By the way, it is pure
coincidence that they just happen to announce this in the lead up
to closures of the Great Sandy Straights and the Qld election.
This apparent dramatic increase however, is totally against all their
scientificaly based predictions and more importantly is totally out
of line with years of research into no take, conservation and
research zones that were closed a decade earlier.
Cheers Mick