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HomeFish and Game CodeDiv. 3Ch. 10.5§ 2851 Marine Protected Areas Reform

§ 2851 Marine Protected Areas Reform

Fish and Game Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 2851 Marine Protected Areas Reform

This law says California's ocean protected areas were made without a good plan and need to be fixed to better protect sea life and habitats. It explains why these areas are important and how they can help fish and the ocean stay healthy.

Key Takeaways

  • •California's ocean protected areas were not planned well and need to be improved.
  • •These areas help protect fish and sea life, which is good for the environment and people.
  • •Right now, only a tiny part of the ocean is fully protected where no fishing is allowed.
  • •The law wants more areas like this to help fish and study how the ocean stays healthy.

Example

Imagine a small part of the ocean where fishing is not allowed so fish can grow and multiply safely.

This law says we need more areas like this to help fish populations recover and keep the ocean healthy. Right now, almost none of California's ocean is fully protected like this.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 2851 Marine Protected Areas Reform

The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (a) California’s marine protected areas (MPAs) were established on a piecemeal basis rather than according to a coherent plan and sound scientific guidelines. Many of these MPAs lack clearly defined purposes, effective management measures and enforcement. As a result, the array of MPAs creates the illusion of protection while falling far short of its potential to protect and conserve living marine life and habitat. (b) California’s extraordinary marine biological diversity is a vital asset to the state and nation. The diversity of species and ecosystems found in the state’s ocean waters is important to public health and well-being, ecological health, and ocean-dependent industry. (c) Coastal development, water pollution, and other human activities threaten the health of marine habitat and the biological diversity found in California’s ocean waters. New technologies and demands have encouraged the expansion of fishing and other activities to formerly inaccessible marine areas that once recharged nearby fisheries. As a result, ecosystems throughout the state’s ocean waters are being altered, often at a rapid rate. (d) Fish and other sea life are a sustainable resource, and fishing is an important community asset. MPAs and sound fishery management are complementary components of a comprehensive effort to sustain marine habitats and fisheries. (e) Understanding of the impacts of human activities and the processes required to sustain the abundance and diversity of marine life is limited. The designation of certain areas as sea life reserves can help expand our knowledge by providing baseline information and improving our understanding of ecosystems where minimal disturbance occurs. (f) Marine life reserves are an essential element of an MPA system because they protect habitat and ecosystems, conserve biological diversity, provide a sanctuary for fish and other sea life, enhance recreational and educational opportunities, provide a reference point against which scientists can measure changes elsewhere in the marine environment, and may help rebuild depleted fisheries. (g) Despite the demonstrated value of marine life reserves, only 14 of the 220,000 square miles of combined state and federal ocean water off California, or six-thousandths of 1 percent, are set aside as genuine no take areas. (h) For all of the above reasons, it is necessary to modify the existing collection of MPAs to ensure that they are designed and managed according to clear, conservation-based goals and guidelines that take full advantage of the multiple benefits that can be derived from the establishment of marine life reserves. (Added by Stats. 1999, Ch. 1015, Sec. 1. Effective January 1, 2000.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

pollutiondiversityenforcementhealthfishingporteducationlegislature

Related Statutes

  • § 2853 Marine Life Protection Program
  • § 1801 Wildlife Conservation Policy
  • § 8230 Commercial Salmon Fishing Limits
  • § 9025.1 Commercial Hook And Line Regulation
  • § 10667 Dana Point Fishing Regulations

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Fish and Game Code. Section 2851.
View Official Source