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The Governments of the Netherlands and Malawi
recently convened a workshop that developed the
following 12 principles of an ecosystem approach to
conservation and sustainable use of biological
diversity.
- Management objectives are a matter of
societal choice.
- Management should be decentralized to the
lowest appropriate level.
- Ecosystem managers should consider the
effects of their activities on adjacent and
other ecosystems.
- There is a need to understand the ecosystem
in an economic context.
- A key feature of the approach includes
conservation of ecosystem structure and
functioning.
- Ecosystems must be managed within the limits
of their functioning.
- The ecosystem approach should be undertaken
at the appropriate scale.
- Objectives for ecosystem management should
be set for the long-term.
- Management must realize that change is
inevitable.
- There must be a balance between conservation
and use.
- All forms of relevant information should be
considered, including scientific and indigenous
and local knowledge, innovations and
practices.
- All relevant sectors of society and
scientific disciplines should be involved.
There are more specific strategies, such as,
inter alia, promoting in situ
conservation, supported where appropriate by ex
situ conservation; the use of aquatic protected
areas; cross-sectoral and multi-disciplinary
planning and management; and the certification of
environmentally friendly products (eco-labelling),
such as the International Federation of Organic
Agriculture Movement (IFOAM) and WWF and Unilever's
Marine Stewardship Programme. Fisheries management
is an obvious strategy that could help implement
policy, however, the real goals of fishery
management are often simply to maximize production
or to perpetuate existing activities, despite their
non-sustainability and needs for subsidies. Fishery
management should be seen as in situ conservation.
International treaties such as the FAO Code of
Conduct for Responsible Fisheries are making
strides in this direction by advocating the
elimination of perverse subsidies, the reduction in
the over-capacity of the world's fishing fleets,
and the conservation of native aquatic genetic
resources.
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