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Synopses of Research Articles
Mixing Exploitation and Conservation: A Recipe for Disaster
Liza Gross | DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040418
Most governments around the world set conservation policy
based on the assumption that resource exploitation and
species protection can co-exist in the same place. These
policies have led to Orwellian “marine protected areas” that
host commercial fi shing operations, leading one to wonder
who’s protecting whom. A new study reveals the danger of
this approach and shows that it’s time to let protection mean
protection.
For decades, the Dutch government sanctioned mechanical
cockle dredging in three-fourths of the intertidal fl ats of the
Wadden Sea—a natural monument protected under two
intergovernmental treaties. Before suction dredging began
in the 1960s, an estimated 2,000 tons of cockles were hand-
harvested from the reserve each year. In 1989, the high-
pressure, motor-driven water pumps used in suction dredging
sucked up close to 80,000 tons of cockles. By 2004, the Dutch
government decided the environmental costs were too great
and stopped the practice.
Jan van Gils and colleagues investigated the ecological
impacts of commercial cockle dredging on intertidal
ecosystems by studying a long-distance migrant shorebird that
dines principally on cockles, the red knot (Calidris canutus
islandica). Up to 50% of the global red knot population uses
the Dutch Wadden Sea at some point during their annual
cycle.
Red knots are exquisitely adapted to their lifestyle. They
have a pressure-sensitive bill that senses hard objects buried
in the sand and a shell-crushing gizzard to accommodate the
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040418.g001
birds’ penchant for swallowing their catch whole. They even
have a fl exible digestive system that minimizes the energy Commercial shellfi sh dredging in the Dutch Wadden Sea
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