Global Conservation

View Original

Baja Sur Marine Protection, Mexico

Mobula rays gather in the thousands in the waters of Baja Sur, but scientists don't exactly know why. It's possible that they are trying to find mates or that they hunt together for safety in numbers.

Overview

The Gulf of California and Baja California Sur are global marine biodiversity treasures. More than 800 species of fish, > 4000 species of invertebrates, 17 species of seabirds, 70% of marine mammals species, and 5 species of sea turtles make these waters their home. For a long time, small-scale artisanal fisheries were not regulated in this part of Mexico, leading to signs of decline in marine habitat, fish, and wildlife.

SIZE

213,700 Hectares

GOAL

$240,000

VISITORS BY 2030

22,000


Introduction

The focus of Global Conservation is on community-based marine protection initiatives and the protection of marine national parks from Loreto to Cabo Pulmo.

Within this region, National Parks protect not only marine biodiversity but also promote a local identity, providing jobs (artisanal and sport fishing, marine ecotourism, tourism), food, economy, and recreational sites. Outside of the national parks, however, there are amazing community-based efforts to protect fisheries and ways of making a living in the marine corridor Loreto–La Paz. Small-scale fisheries and sport fishing provide food and jobs for locals, and local pride along with a fisheries law could improve current efforts to protect the marine environment against major threats like climate change, illegal fishing, industrial fishing, and IUU fishing.

In collaboration with our local partners, authorities, and new partnerships, GC is intensifying our Global Park Defense efforts to safeguard the marine environment along the east coast of Baja California Sur. This includes bolstering marine protection in iconic locations like San Basilio and World Heritage Sites like Loreto Bay National Park, traversing through fisheries communities to safeguard their fishing refugees, and covering an area of over 250,000 hectares (2500 sq km). We are also delivering technology, upgrading the Loreto NP Command and Monitor Center, providing financial support to enhance marine patrols, and providing training, technical assistance, networking, and mentorship.

In 2023, Global Conservation secured and matched funding for active protection alongside foundations, creating the necessary conditions to ensure marine patrols, train, and refine our GPD. This was achieved by incorporating solutions such as Earthranger, Skylight, and our Marine Monitors, which enable real-time tracking of vessels of all types. Our approach allows the National Park and marine guardians to monitor large areas (70,000 hectares), saving time and money, and enabling the launch of planned patrols based on smart alerts and remote detection.

We would like to acknowledge the Loreto Bay NP rangers for their invaluable commitment and dedication, which have made these achievements possible in Loreto National Park. Their efforts have consolidated this MPA as a regional example of marine protection and surveillance, leading to effective management.


History

In the 1980s, this area was targeted by overzealous sport and commercial fishermen, driving fish stocks into precipitous decline. The local communities were distressed by the collapse of their fisheries, and with the help of research from the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, they lobbied the government to protect the region.

On June 15, 1995, President Zedillo Ponce de Leon declared the 7,111 hectares and waters surrounding Cabo Pulmo a national marine park. Cabo Pulmo is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, protected and managed by the National Commission for Natural Protected Areas (CONANP) in partnership with the local community and the NGO ProNatura Noreste. Cabo Pulmo National Park spans approximately 100 km (60 miles) between Pulmo Point and Los Frailes Cape, occupying just a fraction of the Sea of Cortez.

At its founding, an impressive 35% of Cabo Pulmo National Park was preserved as no-fishing areas. After further determined action by local families, the entire park was designated a no-fishing zone. Thanks to the community’s efforts, this once-barren reef is now recognized as an area of global marine conservation significance.


Cabo Pulmo National Park has been called
the most successful Marine Protected Area (MPA) in the world, with fish and other wildlife increasing nearly 500% since its establishment.

What may seem to be mostly barren desert islands and peninsulas are actually bursting with life. Coyotes, birds of prey, small birds, rodents, lizards, cactus plants, and much more call these lands home.

Natural History

Here, the vast desert and pristine beaches give way to a shallow bay that cradles one of only three living reefs, and the only hard coral reef, in North America. Thanks to a diversity of oceanographic processes, including wind- and current-driven upwelling, tidal mixing, and hydrothermal vents, Cabo Pulmo is exceptionally biodiverse.

In this rejuvenated reef, enormous schools of jackfish spiral, shining in the sun. At Isla San Pedro, sea lions frolic in the current, playfully approaching divers. In the fall, whale sharks, the largest fish in the world, arrive in Cabo Pulmo. Come winter, humpback, gray, and sperm whales emerge from the deep ocean to enjoy the shallow coastal waters. Five of the world’s eight turtle species patrol the waves, while rays, octopuses, reef sharks, and colorful fish swim among the vibrant coral heads. Garden eels poke their head from the sand, waving in the current like stalks of grass. The reef has even become a refuge for the enormous and endangered gulf grouper, a long-lived and top-level predator that once represented 45% of all fish caught by local communities. Now, it is staunchly protected.

The park is also home to over 890 fish species, 90 of them endemic, along with 25 species of coral, over 4,800 invertebrate species, the poisonous yellow-bellied sea snake, and 90% of the world's near-threatened Heermann's gulls. Almost 40% of the world’s marine mammal species live here, including 34 species of dolphins and whales and the breeding and nursery grounds for 30,000 California sea lions.

Saving Cabo Pulmo

Thanks to this remarkable diversity, the Sea of Cortez is a global conservation gem. Its waters are invaluable to science and as a fisheries and tourism resource that benefits local people. An investment in Cabo Pulmo’s protection and conservation is an investment in local communities.

Now, the challenge is to protect Cabo Pulmo from increasing pressure as other fisheries in the Sea of Cortez decline. Despite protection, over the past 10 years, the park has endured pressures from commercial fishing and abuse from uninformed visitors. Plans for enormous coastal development projects have threatened to put unsustainable pressure on the reef.

Illegal fishing by both sport and commercial fishermen have caused damage to Cabo Pulmo National Marine Park, but in a region where local communities live on the seafood they catch by hand, enforcing the ban on fishing presents a challenge.

Unfortunately, marine managers frequently have limited financial and human resources, making it difficult to effectively manage such areas. Military radar systems for monitoring marine activity exist, but cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, well beyond the financial resources available to marine managers.

Consequently, effective protection in Cabo Pulmo has been a challenge, and the costs have been high. To protect this unique place, Global Conservation and the Anthropocene Institute (AI) are working with ProNatura Mexico to deploy Marine Monitor (M2) radar systems, long-range cameras, UAV Drones and SMART Patrols.

Global Conservation is also supporting next-generation industrial design and engineering for a new off-grid Mobile Marine Monitor (M3) trailer system which can be shipped in standard containers anywhere in the world. As the number of MPAs continues to increase globally, it is vital that managers monitor boat activity within and around MPAs. We hope that this pioneering model will be adopted in MPAs across Mexico.

Cabo Pulmo is a true conservation success story. In his logbook, John Steinbeck said, “a dream hangs over the whole region.” For us, that dream is to help local communities protect this pristine sea long into the future.

Partners in Conservation

ProNatura Mexico

ProNatura is an organization that has been dedicated for almost 40 years to the conservation of Mexican biodiversity and ecosystem services. They are committed to finding sustainable and innovative solutions to major conservation challenges like climate change, watershed protection, and ecosystem restoration, seeking ultimately to contribute to the creation of a just and equitable society in harmony with nature. 

Anthropocene Institute / ProtectedSeas

The Anthropocene Institute’s mission is to drive thought leadership and investment, seeking to accelerate the technological and community innovations necessary to address the needs of our planet.

ProtectedSeas is a marine conservation organization associated with the Anthropocene Institute, whose mission is to raise awareness and protection of critical marine areas. The organization assists MPA managers in protecting vulnerable ecosystems and works to improve information and transparency around ocean conservation measures. They are working to develop a visual database in map form of every MPA in the world, as well as deploy Marine Monitor radar systems to protect vulnerable areas from illegal activity.

Together, the Anthropocene Institute and ProtectedSeas are the creators of the Marine Monitor (M2) and Mobile Marine Monitor (M3) systems, which are critical to our success in marine protection.

National Commission for Natural Protected Areas (CONANP)

CONANP is our main partner to which we focus our support; their participation is crucial to strengthen the operational capacities for the protection and conservation of the marine protected areas where we collaborate, Loreto, Cabo Pulmo, and the Islas Marías.


See this gallery in the original post