What are fishermen catching in the Solomon Islands? The government wants to know, to better manage the archipelago’s fisheries. Our Marine Consulting Initiatives (MCI) team recently linked up with the Solomon Islands government and the Coral Triangle Initiative to develop a new mobile app that will allow improve the ability for surveyors in fish markets to record what’s coming over the docks.

Solomons HappyFish

A surveyor with the Ministry of Fisheries interviews a vendor at the Honiara fish market using a new mobile app Happy Fish, counting the number and type of species in the vendors bin or ‘esky’. Photo via USAID CTSP / Tory Read.

The aggregated data will help the government paint a better picture of fishing hauls in the Solomons.  A post on the Coral Triangle Initiative site explains more:

Good fisheries management requires good data.  The administrators at the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources in Solomon Islands felt constrained in their work by the lack of information on the current use of inshore fisheries around the country.  Ben Buga, marketing director and chief fisheries officer at Ministry of Fisheries, summed it up: “For resource management programs and to support the fishing communities, we need accurate data on production, species, origin, how, when and by whom the fish are being caught.”  Leaders from the Ministry of Fisheries explained this need at a CTI Regional Business Forum in 2012, and USAID’s Coral Triangle Support Partnership (CTSP) stepped up to help the Ministry meet the challenge.

With CTSP support, the Ministry of Fisheries tasked Ben with making an information-gathering plan and hiring and training eight people to work as market surveyors. With CTSP support, Dr. Robert Pomeroy from the University of Connecticut Sea Grant Program and Dr. Kevin Rhodes, a professor of marine biology at the University of Hawaii at Hilo, were brought in with the help of CTSP consortium members WWF and CI to develop surveys to close information gaps, supervise and train market surveyors and assist Buga in managing the program.  Training in how to administer surveys was conducted in the main market at Honiara, the capital of Guadalcanal Island.

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The Happy Fish survey interface.

Similar surveys have been done in many places, and the weakness of all of them has been the use of paper forms to record the interviews.  Paper can be damaged or lost, and the information from the forms must be transcribed manually to computers, creating the potential for mistakes and posing considerable challenges to timely use of data.  To clear this hurdle, CTSP worked with the NGO Ecotrust to develop a mobile application to enable surveyors to capture and input data on site.  The mobile app, called Happy Fish, will allow accurate recording and instantaneous wireless transmission of survey information to a database programmed to analyze the data and generate useful reports for managers, on demand.  This exciting program is setting an example for other Coral Triangle and Pacific countries to use technology to support local economies and food security for inshore fisheries.

 

 

 

Stephanie Mutz was on track to becoming a professor. She earned a bachelor’s degree in marine biology from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a master’s degree in tropical marine biology from James Cook University in Aus­tralia. But while her thesis was being reviewed she took a job as a deckhand and didn’t look back.

Mutz has operated her own boat, primarily dive fishing for urchins and snails, while also trapping fish, rock crab, spiny lobster, and Santa Barbara spot prawns. She now serves as President for Commercial Fishermen of Santa Barbara, a non-profit organization that strives to create new models for collaboration by connecting fishermen with each other and with fishery scientists. CFSB is a member of the Ecotrust-backed Community Fisheries Network, which held its third annual meeting in March.

Stephanie Mutz serves as a go-between for fish harvesters and communities in Santa Barbara.

Stephanie Mutz serves as a go-between for fish harvesters and communities in Santa Barbara. Photo: Fran Collin

CFSB operates by the Golden Rule: only catch what you can sell. They partner with the Santa Barbara Fish Market, which is 200 yards from the pier and will fillet their fish for free.

While Mutz does serve as an adjunct professor of biology for Ventura Community College, her overall educational approach is grassroots. She holds a number of positions on advisory and executive boards, including serving as Co-founder for Santa Barbara’s first and only Community Supported Fishery.

Q. How is CFSB evolving?

A. Fishermen are talking together more, working through issues, and coming up with resolutions. We’re becoming more formal with bylaws and insurance policies. We’d also like to engage more in marketing. But we want to keep our focus at the community level. The largest boat size is 60 feet and we only have two of those; the average boat size is 30 feet. Inventory isn’t always consistent, depending upon the circumstances. We tell restaurants that a good way to think about us is don’t put us on the menu, put us on the chalkboard.

Q. What are the benefits of working with someone in Maine or Alaska, through the Community Fisheries Network?

A. Having a national network like the CFN provides a common ground—it’s a way to hear other people’s stories and issues and see how ours compare. If we’ve dealt with the issue here, we can provide advice to others and vice versa. The network provides strength in numbers and support for common struggles.

Q. What does your outreach to the community look like?

A. A number of CFSB fishermen talk to food clubs, at festivals, and to people who want to know more about harvesting/quirky biology about seafood. My passion has always been teaching, and I’ve realized that I prefer grassroots, organic education. I want to nerd out and tell people all the things they want to learn about.

When I first started outreaching to the community seven or so years ago, I was on my soap box, telling people what they should and shouldn’t do and I realized that I have to relate to people on their level. I’m still learning how to get my message out in language that is accessible to the public and sometimes I need to tone down my approach. I used to teach people how to fillet a fish and boil a crab on Earth Day. Some people had a visceral reaction to me killing food right there on Earth Day!

Q. Is there a good return on investment in outreach?

A. We’re seeing a lot more fishermen getting involved in direct marketing, but it is extra work. I enjoy helping people with strategy; I’d like to be a consultant for fishermen. There’s a communal nature to the industry—consumers like knowing where their food is coming from and fishermen like seeing where their food goes.

 

Yesterday, the Obama Administration released the final ocean action plan to help coordinate the federal government’s efforts to tackle some of the biggest threats facing oceans, coasts and Great Lakes. This advances the National Ocean Policy’s  goal of creating healthier oceans and coasts and stronger economies for our coastal communities.

The health and resilience of the marine environment are crucial to maintaining a diverse suite of economic, social and environmental benefits that we all depend on. In the Pacific Northwest, ocean-related activities contributed nearly $1.8 billion and 26,700 jobs in Oregon and $7 billion and 103,500 jobs in Washington in 2009. America as a whole is no different: the nation’s ocean economy is valued at $138 billion per year and supports 2.3 million jobs.

Hoh River mouth, WA   Photo by Sam Beebe

The national ocean plan sets the stage for smarter ocean use along our coasts. Photo by Sam Beebe

 The implementation plan released yesterday is meant to ensure all government agencies that play a role in ocean-related work — from fishing to shipping to offshore energy and coastal development — work from a single playbook: the National Ocean Policy.

 As Nancy Sutley, Chair of the Council on Environmental Quality and Co-Chair of the National Ocean Council said yesterday:

With increasing demands on our ocean, we must improve how we work together, share information, and plan smartly to grow our economy, keep our ocean healthy, and enjoy the highest benefits from our ocean resources, now and in the future.”

Ecotrust recognizes the value of robust regional ocean planning and we are working with a number of partners along our nation’s coasts to support smart implementation of the NOP. Our cutting edge data visualization and interactive mapping tools, such as the MARCO Ocean Data Portal that we designed with our partners in the Mid-Atlantic, offer ocean stakeholders a means to engage in informed dialogue about the best uses of our oceans.

The MARCO Portal and other data visualization tools are key piece of implementing the national ocean plan.

The MARCO Portal and other data visualization tools give diverse stakeholders common ground to consider the best ocean uses.

As Rick Robins, Chair of the Mid-Atlantic Fisheries Management Council, remarked yesterday on the White House blog, tools like the MARCO Portal allow the kind of…

…enhanced coordination and communication between agencies and ocean sectors [that] is critical to ensuring positive outcomes for present and future generations.”

 The National Ocean Policy (NOP) coordinates the work of our federal agencies through the National Ocean Council and encourages states and all stakeholders, including the public, to work together to help address some of the biggest challenges facing ocean life and the communities that are connected to the sea. And the NOP’s Final Implementation Plan reflects over two years worth of hard work, investment and commitment made by state governments, commercial and industrial ocean users, universities and scientists, 25 federal agencies and departments and tens of thousands of citizens across the country to move our oceans toward better ocean management.

 We now need state and federal agencies, Governors, tribes, and our elected leaders to support and fund the implementation of the National Ocean Policy.

 

How will we all thrive on a densely populated, rapidly changing planet?  For over twenty years, Ecotrust has been tackling this question, through the creation of innovative mapping and software solutions that bridge different perspectives on land and ocean use.  These tools empower people to understand complex information and solve problems collaboratively.

One thing we have learned is that one-size-fits-all software solutions often fall short, especially when it comes to supporting a complex decision-making process.  Instead, the most successful solutions provide carefully chosen features that are tailored to the specific goal, process, audience, geography, and culture.  This takes time and often multiple iterations to get right.  As an organization that creates many of these decision support tools each year, the question we faced was how to make this process more efficient.  The answer we found was to distill our best practices and most popular software features into a modular framework that allows a developer to choose only what they need for the problem at hand and to customize it quickly.  We’ve refined this framework over many projects this last year and in the spirit of sharing good ideas, we are now proud to announce the release of Madrona, a software framework for effective place-based decision making.

Madrona provides software developers with a set of building blocks that can be mixed and matched to create cutting-edge, web-based tools for decision support and spatial planning at any scale.  It can be used in sectors ranging from natural resource management to ocean and land-use planning, urban and community planning, energy, transportation, health care and more.  These building blocks have evolved through extensive work with project partners, including our award-winning work with the MarineMap Consortium designing marine protected areas in California, with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service identifying conservation priorities in the coastal rainforests of the Pacific Northwest, and in helping regional leaders around the world visualize future vulnerabilities and resilience-building opportunities.

In partnership with The Nature Conservancy, Madrona tools are supporting ocean and shoreline planning in Washington.

Conceptually, you can think of Madrona like you would the materials and plans for building a house. There are core materials that form a strong foundation (group collaboration, a spatial content management system), various rooms and options to choose from (2D and 3D mapping, scenario planning), and the flexibility to make your own additions and alterations.  Ultimately, how you build it is up to you. The goal of Madrona is to let you focus on the bigger picture and not get distracted by all of the nuts and bolts.

To learn more visit madrona.ecotrust.org.  We offer case studies, step-by-step tutorials, generous open source licensing, a community forum for asking questions, and a full range of consulting services.  We invite technologists from around the world to use Madrona and contribute to its ongoing evolution.   Together we can achieve a larger global impact through improved decision making.

 

 

Today, on the eve of the Rio+20 Earth Summit, Ecotrust is joining the Global Partnership for Oceans, backed by the World Bank and joined by major seafood buyers like COSTCO, international aid bodies such as the U.S. Agency for International Development, and other civil society groups such as Conservation International and The Nature Conservancy. The partnership will invest targeted funds into sustainable seafood harvesting and aquaculture initiatives, coastal conservation efforts and ocean pollution reduction projects. The aim is to deliver crucial innovation for the 6 billion people worldwide who will live on or near the coast by 2025.

Whole Earth

The Global Partnership for Oceans will invest in sustainable seafood initiatives and coastal ecosystems. NASA via Flickr.

 

So why is a regional organization like Ecotrust – one rooted firmly in the West Coast of North America – joining this partnership?

For the last twenty years, we’ve been experimenting with new approaches to building resilient and prosperous communities, economies and ecosystems here in our bioregion. Now, it’s time to take what we’ve learned to a global scale.

The need is great. Consider that the oceans already supply 350 million jobs, and that seafood products provide primary protein for 1 billion people every day.

In order to deal with these realities and the coming surges of population growth and climate change we need to take novelty worldwide. We believe that partnerships like this one are the best way to network good regional ideas and deliver the radical change we need across the globe.

At the top of the list are these three tools and sets of expertise that we’ll bring to the global partnership:

  • Impact investing in whole ecosystems.  Ecotrust has had success pooling investments from private and foundation sources, buying forestland, managing it for whole ecosystem health, and delivering steady returns from nature’s dividends to investors and communities. On 12,000 acres in Oregon and Washington bought by Ecotrust Forests, Ecotrust Forest Management is selectively logging multiple tree species, selling credits for carbon sequestered in standing trees and other plant material, nurturing wildlife habitat in exchange for conservation payments and protecting clean water in streams and rivers, with an eye toward water markets. Timber and land management jobs created in distressed communities allow us to leverage New Markets Tax Credits as well.  We’re now exploring similar investment approaches for marine ecosystems.
  • Community-based fisheries.  One of the proven ways to maintain healthy, well-managed fish stocks for the long-term is to involve local fishermen in management and support them with stable financing methods. People who live on the ocean and depend on its resources for a livelihood have the greatest stake in its health. Community fisheries groups have thrived all around the world and we’ve brought innovative financing mechanisms to some in the Northwest through the North Pacific Fisheries Trust. We’re now connecting the experience of isolated communities in conservation, financing and fish brand marketing through the Community Fisheries Network. That sort of networking and the solutions that evolve from it have applications worldwide.
  • Decision-support tools that integrate conservation with coastal economies. Marine protected area networks in California and Australia were enshrined into law this past week, showing a trend toward marine stewardship across the world. Ecotrust’s decision-support tools allow marine planners to compile data on myriad ocean uses into one mapping tool, and weigh the impacts of protected areas and other management changes on fishermen, recreational boaters, shippers and other ocean users. In California’s marine protected area process, our decision-support tools allowed planning groups to significantly reduce the impacts of protected areas on commercial fishermen. Competing ocean uses worldwide demand this integrated, state-of-the-art approach.

The contexts of regions worldwide are different, but we face similar vulnerabilities and challenges on a crowded, warming planet.  For instance, when envisioning sea-level rise, people typically see it swamping low-lying Pacific islands like Kiribati, which is already seeking higher elevation land in Fiji to relocate its people. But new projections also show potentially devastating consequences for Pacific Northwest communities in river deltas should seas rise an expected one meter. Some communities around Vancouver, B.C.  would be forced to relocate and its airport would be threatened. So the city has something to learn from Kiribati (prounced KiriBAS).

Last fall, Kiribati president Anote Tong joined us in Portland for a convening of 50 other regional leaders from around the world. We asked the group: how can we foster resilience in the face of huge global change? Tong noted that his country had already lost a lot of its resilience. But in the quest to get it back, the country had offered up a massive marine protected area — 160,000 square miles — that he hoped would serve as a sanctuary for marine species in these turbulent times. He called it Kiribati’s gift to the world and it has since been declared a World Heritage Site.

We have nowhere near this sort of magnanimous offering to the world. But in this same spirit, we offer up our tools and experience to a new global partnership, part of the global experiment in scaling regional solutions for resilience.

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