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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, February 4, 2007

Pacific neighbors hold key in preserving NW isles

By Tara Godvin
Associated Press

LEARN MORE

Northwestern Hawaiian Islands National Marine Monument: www.hawaiireef.noaa.gov

Conservation Society of Pohnpei: www.serehd.org

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With its buzzing overpasses, fashionable shops and swarms of soaring building cranes, it seems illogical to describe Hawai'i as behind struggling economies such as Pohnpei and Fiji in almost anything. But experts say the state has much to learn — or relearn — from its less-developed neighbors to preserve its precious ocean resources.

"Things that these cultures have kept alive and know about now, we're just beginning to discover in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands," said Randy Kosaki, research coordinator with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association for the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands National Marine Monument.

Oceania welcomed Hawai'i back into the fold last week at an international forum at the East-West Center attended by 20 Pacific nations and states discussing marine management areas and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO, World Heritage Site process for nominating new areas to be protected.

Pacific island nations are far ahead of Hawai'i in terms of blending traditional ecological knowledge and Western science, Kosaki said in an interview at the conference.

CULTURE VS. SCIENCE

In Pohnpei, when members of the grassroots Conservation Society of Pohnpei wanted to create local preserves, they simply needed to ask local elders to point out where the fish spawning grounds are, he said.

But in Hawaiian waters, those critical answers can only be gained by highly trained scientists conducting lengthy studies tagging and tracking targeted fish species to discover their "spawning aggregations."

"We're trying to reinvent the wheel using high-tech methods when these cultures have kept that knowledge alive for millennia," Kosaki said.

President Bush created the monument last year to protect the 4,500 square miles of coral reefs and more than 7,000 marine species among the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. And now federal and state authorities must find ways to manage the massive area.

Islands of the Pacific are linked not just by culture, but also ecological and geological similarities.

Because of its political ties, Hawai'i has historically looked toward North America for models. But in many cases a good continental model is inappropriate for the Islands, where fish populations are gathered in discrete spots rather than along massive shelves extending down an entire continental coast, Kosaki said.

"Models that have been developed in Oceania are much more applicable to what we do here," he said.

Among the vanguard of a trend toward creating marine managed areas in the Pacific is Ratu Aisea Katonivere, paramount chief of the Fijian province of Macuata with a population of about 110,000.

SUCCESS IN FIJI

Katonivere decided to protect his province's reef after learning from a worker with the conservationist group WWF, known as World Wildlife Fund in North America, that the reef — the third longest barrier reef system in the world — had global significance. At the same time fishermen were reporting leaner catches, he said.

"So it was a big thing for us to mobilize a society to believe the vision of conservation is to do marine protected areas," said Katonivere, a towering, massive man whose physique seems suited to his title.

Katonivere brought his idea to the people of his province, who know the reefs best, and asked them to decide where to put the protected areas.

In January 2005, as Katonivere's local effort was moving forward, Fiji's government pledged to protect at least 30 percent of its waters by 2020. By November 2005, Katonivere and four other chiefs had created protected areas covering 32 square miles of Macuata's reef.

And now fish have already begun returning to the area, he said.

Inspired by Fiji's example, Palau, Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, Guam and the Northern Marianas Islands made a similar pledge last year called the Micronesia Challenge.

The same type of community involvement seen in Macuata will help Pacific nations overcome their financial limits to creating and enforcing marine protections, said William Kostka, a founder of the Conservation Society of Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia.

Hawai'i has a mix of several protected areas, such as O'ahu's Hanauma Bay, and some managed areas where fishing for certain species is periodically banned or only certain methods, such as pole fishing, are allowed.

The state also is working to put gill net bans in effect for portions of O'ahu and Maui. Macuata in Fiji has had a ban on such nets since 1989.

"Again, we're learning from the Pacific. We're kind of the last one to come to this table for marine resource management in the Pacific. But it's about time," Kosaki said.