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Featured researches published by Hazel O Arceo.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2005

Monitoring and evaluation of reef protected areas by local fishers in the Philippines: tightening the adaptive management cycle

Andre J. Uychiaoco; Hazel O Arceo; Stuart J. Green; Margarita T. De La Cruz; Paulyn A. Gaite; Porfirio M. Aliño

Monitoring by local community managers tightens the adaptive management cycle by linking management more closely with its evaluation, so management actions become more responsive to the field situation. Local community volunteers, usually fishers, managing coral reef protected areas in the Philippines used simple methods (e.g. snorkeling fish visual census) to periodically monitor and evaluate reef protection together with professional marine biologists. Except for estimates of hard coral, data collected by local volunteers were not significantly correlated with data collected by biologists (specifically abundance estimates of sand, major reef fish carnivores, and fish herbivores). Community-collected fish data generally have higher variance and show higher abundances than biologist-collected data. Nonetheless, though the data was less precise, the locally based monitoring identified or confirmed the need for management actions that were generic in nature (e.g. stronger enforcement, organizational strengthening, etc.). The locally based monitoring also encouraged cooperation among stakeholders and prompted a management response. Little time and financing is required after initial establishment and replication has been increasing. However, sustainability depends upon the communities’ perceived added-value of undertaking the monitoring and input from a paid and/or more committed local person (e.g. government) who occasionally conducts monitoring himself/herself and supervises the community monitoring. Management impact depends heavily upon good integration with active management interventions outside the monitoring effort per se


PLOS ONE | 2016

Abundance and Diversity of Crypto- and Necto-Benthic Coastal Fish Are Higher in Marine Forests than in Structurally Less Complex Macroalgal Assemblages

Pierre Thiriet; Antonio Di Franco; Adrien Cheminée; Paolo Guidetti; Olivier Bianchimani; Solène Basthard-Bogain; Jean-Michel Cottalorda; Hazel O Arceo; Joan Moranta; Pierre Lejeune; Patrice Francour; L. Mangialajo

In Mediterranean subtidal rocky reefs, Cystoseira spp. (Phaeophyceae) form dense canopies up to 1 m high. Such habitats, called ‘Cystoseira forests’, are regressing across the entire Mediterranean Sea due to multiple anthropogenic stressors, as are other large brown algae forests worldwide. Cystoseira forests are being replaced by structurally less complex habitats, but little information is available regarding the potential difference in the structure and composition of fish assemblages between these habitats. To fill this void, we compared necto-benthic (NB) and crypto-benthic (CB) fish assemblage structures between Cystoseira forests and two habitats usually replacing the forests (turf and barren), in two sampling regions (Corsica and Menorca). We sampled NB fish using Underwater Visual Census (UVC) and CB fish using Enclosed Anaesthetic Station Vacuuming (EASV), since UVC is known to underestimate the diversity and density of the ‘hard to spot’ CB fish. We found that both taxonomic diversity and total density of NB and CB fish were highest in Cystoseira forests and lowest in barrens, while turfs, that could be sampled only at Menorca, showed intermediate values. Conversely, total biomass of NB and CB fish did not differ between habitats because the larger average size of fish in barrens (and turfs) compensated for their lower densities. The NB families Labridae and Serranidae, and the CB families Blenniidae, Cliniidae, Gobiidae, Trypterigiidae and Scorpaenidae, were more abundant in forests. The NB taxa Diplodus spp. and Thalassoma pavo were more abundant in barrens. Our study highlights the importance of using EASV for sampling CB fish, and shows that Cystoseira forests support rich and diversified fish assemblages. This evidence suggests that the ongoing loss of Cystoseira forests may impair coastal fish assemblages and related goods and services to humans, and stresses the need to implement strategies for the successful conservation and/or recovery of marine forests.


Archive | 2013

Sharing the Costs and Benefits of Marine Protected Areas: Implications for Good Coastal Resource Governance

Maria Zita Toribio; Hazel O Arceo; Porfirio M. Aliño

This study analyses how the costs and benefits of marine protected areas (MPAs) are being shared under various management arrangements and how governance relates to MPA cost and level of management effectiveness. The results reveal that cost sharing varies with management type and is influenced by economies of scale and marginalized communities significantly contribute through volunteer labour. Better governed MPAs tend to be more cost-effective. The need for equitable sharing of costs and benefits, community incentives and integrated approach to resource management and local development are highlighted. Theoretical, anecdotal and short-term field observations support the benefits of MPA network approach. Understanding of the socio-economic and institutional dynamics coupled with economic analysis will inform the design of cost-effective MPAs.


State of the Mangrove Summit: Northwestern Luzon Proceedings | 2015

C. The Need for Institutional Networking in Integrated Coastal Management: Interconnectivity among Coral Reefs, Seagrass Beds and Mangroves

Porfirio M. Aliño; Richard N. Muallil; Hazel O Arceo

!e Philippines is an archipelagic country where millions of inhabitants are, in one way or another, dependent on the sheries and ecosystem services provided by coral reefs, seagrass beds and mangroves. However, these valuable resources are being threatened by issues such as coastal development, overshing, destructive shing, sedimentation and pollution, which are widespread in the country. Coastal sheries all over the country have been drastically declining especially over the last few decades because of overshing and irresponsible coastal development activities, which are further exacerbated by climate change impacts (Muallil et al. 2014). !e deteriorating conditions of coastal ecosystems will have serious implications on food security, poverty and the overall well-being of millions of coastal inhabitants in the country.


Bulletin of Marine Science | 2001

Coral bleaching in Philippine reefs: Coincident evidences with mesoscale thermal anomalies

Hazel O Arceo; Miledel C. Quibilan; Porfirio M. Aliño; Goldee Lim; Wilfredo Y. Licuanan


Marine Policy | 2014

Catch trends in Philippine small-scale fisheries over the last five decades: The fishers׳ perspectives

Richard N. Muallil; Samuel S Mamauag; Jeffrey T. Cababaro; Hazel O Arceo; Porfirio M. Aliño


Marine Policy | 2013

Moving beyond a top-down fisheries management approach in the northwestern Mediterranean: Some lessons from the Philippines

Hazel O Arceo; Bertrand Cazalet; Porfirio M. Aliño; L. Mangialajo; Patrice Francour


Archive | 2002

Marine protected areas in Southeast Asia

Catherine P. S. Cheung; Porfirio M. Aliño; Andre J. Uychiaoco; Hazel O Arceo


Marine Biodiversity Records | 2011

Further evidence of the establishment of Fistularia commersonii (Osteichthyes: Fistulariidae) in the north-western Mediterranean Sea

Pascaline Bodilis; Hazel O Arceo; Patrice Francour


Archive | 2001

Coral Reef Monitoring for Management

Andre J. Uychiaoco; Stuart J. Green; Paulyn A. Gaite; Hazel O Arceo; Porfirio M. Aliæo; Alan T. White

Collaboration


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Denmark B Recamara

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Porfirio M. Aliño

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Samuel S Mamauag

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Ma. Celina Anonuevo

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Mary Joyce P Velos

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Richard N. Muallil

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Patrice Francour

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Andre J. Uychiaoco

University of the Philippines Diliman

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Ariel L Loja

University of the Philippines Diliman

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