A Lesson from a Fisherman: Who Controls the Resources? Who Defines Development?

Foodthink’s Perspective

This is the second entry in a series of notes from a visit to fishing communities in southern Thailand. In January this year, Foodthink joined the Blue Climate Initiative to visit fishing villages in the south and learn how small-scale fishers protect marine resources. In three mangrove communities along the Andaman coast, we saw how local fishers, with the support of NGOs, have organised themselves to safeguard the ocean through the creation of community-managed protected areas. But what exactly is a “community-managed protected area”? How did the fishers secure these areas step-by-step, through struggle or cooperation? And what lessons can we draw from their experience?

I. Storm Surge: National Parks and Small Islands

“Look, this was someone’s toilet,” said Ning, our Thai translator, pointing to a stark pit latrine standing out on the beach. This is Ban Mod Tanoy, a small seaside fishing village in Trang Province, Thailand. In September 2023, a powerful storm swept across the coastline. The waves smashed the homes of 17 families living closest to the sea. More than two years on, the scene remains bleak: uprooted coconut palms and house layouts—bedrooms and living rooms—that can still be faintly discerned despite being shattered by the waves. There are also pit latrines, stubbornly fused to their foundations, still standing guard, allowing us, the visitors to this disaster site, to pinpoint where a family’s toilet once stood. Ning pointed towards the intertidal zone: “This used to be a seagrass bed.” All I could see was sand. It was mid-afternoon, and everything was desolate and scorching.

◉ Homes destroyed by the storm; only the toilets remain.

The fishermen in this village are all Muslim, descendants of immigrants from Malaysia, and some can still speak Malay today. Seventeen households whose homes were destroyed by the storm have nowhere to live and are still staying with relatives.

“There is nowhere for these people to rebuild their homes,” says Nok. He is the head of the “Save Andaman Network” (SAN), an NGO based in Trang Province. His full name is Phakphum Vithantirawat, but everyone calls him P’ Nok (in Thai, the prefix P’ is added before a name to show respect to an elder).

The reason is somewhat absurd: this stretch of coastline belongs to a national park, and the management only allows villagers to rebuild on their original plots—nowhere else. But after experiencing such a disaster, the villagers are still shaken and dare not build in such a sensitive and fragile area.

Moreover, the storm caused tide levels to rise, severely eroding the coast and sweeping away a layer of beach, bringing the fishing village even closer to the sea. With climate change, the likelihood of storms of this intensity may increase. To build here again would be a futile struggle against nature.

◉ Two years after the storm surge, the area remains in shambles.

But the villagers are helpless. This is not an isolated case—when land is designated as a “National Park” in the name of conservation, the indigenous people who have lived there for generations often find themselves stripped of the resources they need to survive, such as land, game and timber; this is a scenario playing out in many countries across the globe.

A core issue here is: “Who owns the resources? Who has the power to set the rules?” This is the point that resonated most deeply with me during this trip. One could say that almost everything I encountered prompted reflection on this very question.

However, the villagers have not given up. We came here to see several rows of bamboo poles positioned between the ruins and the sea. These poles serve to both dissipate the energy of the waves and trap sand. The government had originally intended to build a concrete sea wall for protection, but the locals felt that a concrete wall would only drive the waves higher and trap water inside with no way to drain. Consequently, they ultimately chose bamboo.

◉ The bamboo poles stand like sentinels guarding the fishing village. The fishermen have cut a gap through them to allow the boats easy access to the sea.

The government sent workers to bore holes in the sand using high-pressure water jets, inserting bamboo poles to a depth of one metre. In doing so, they created what appeared to us outsiders as a curious sight: rows upon rows of bamboo stretching across a desolate beach into the distance. Though the method looks crude, it is effective; experience has shown that it can trap 70 to 80 centimetres of sand a year, acting as a rustic form of land reclamation. Thus, in a small and slow manner, humans beg the sea for land, bit by bit.

To consolidate the hard-won sand, the villagers also plant mangrove seedlings at the base of the bamboo poles, which are said to take three to four years to mature. They prefer to plant them in clusters so that the mangroves can “grow up with friends and not be lonely”. There is a scientific basis for this: in areas exposed to wind and waves, planting two or three seedlings close together allows them to intertwine, reducing the likelihood of them toppling over.

◉ Mangrove seedlings growing tenaciously on a barren beach.
As we reached the final stretch, two rows of bamboo poles appeared, differing vastly in height, with the taller row looking somewhat disordered. It turned out that Nok and his team, fearing that the poles “planted” by the government would be insufficient, had added another row of their own in the hope of withstanding stronger storms. As he spoke, he sounded a touch proud; for the same amount of work, the government had spent 60,000 Thai baht “planting” their poles, while SAN’s taller row had cost only 20,000.

“Look, a newborn island!” the village head, who was leading our tour, exclaimed, pointing to a small, shimmering sliver of land in the distance. It had originally been nothing more than a shallow sand dune, visible only at low tide. In just seven years, it had grown from a nondescript shoal into a startling little island. (Perhaps that storm washed sand away and deposited it here, accelerating the island’s rise—who knows?) Coconut trees had already taken root, and fishermen were now able to catch crabs in the surrounding waters.

Former seagrass beds are now being reclaimed through rudimentary bamboo methods, and an island has emerged from the shallows. Such profound transformations can happen in just a few short years. In that moment, I felt that we humans were very much like ants.

II. The Vanishing Seagrass and Dugongs

From this storm-ravaged coast, a boat trip of about twenty minutes takes you to a small island called Libong. Seen from the sea, the island appears to be encircled by a ring of brown, fuzzy floating matter. A hundred or two hundred metres from the shore, the engine was cut. Nok beckoned us to get off the boat; thinking I would have to swim, I felt a wave of hesitation.

◉ Nok, who led our visit, is a highly respected veteran of Thailand’s fishing community movement. The SAN, which he leads, is dedicated to protecting species such as seagrass beds, dugongs, and sea turtles in the Andaman Sea.

“Just walk across,” he said.

To my astonishment, I realised the water was incredibly shallow. We rolled our trousers up above our knees and stepped in barefoot; the water only reached our knees. The sand beneath our feet was fine and soft, like stepping on silt.

As we drew closer, I realised that the “floating matter” I had mistaken for an algal bloom was actually seagrass growing on the sandy floor; it was, in fact, a beach almost entirely exposed by the low tide. Only a thin layer of seawater covered the grass. The most abundant variety was a short-leaved seagrass—the primary food for dugongs.

Nok pointed to a series of very shallow grooves underfoot. “These are the tracks of the dugongs,” he explained. In the light of the setting sun, these marks were clearly visible. When the tide rises, dugongs swim here, pressing their mouths against the sand and arching their bodies as they feast. An adult dugong consumes 45 kilograms of seagrass a day.

◉Feeding marks of dugongs. Photo: Qiao Feng

Once the seagrass beds are destroyed, dugongs easily succumb to starvation and death. This is precisely the tragedy that has been unfolding in these waters in recent years.

The cause is the dredging project of the Kantang Channel on the Dongli River. The dredging was intended to accommodate larger cargo ships; in regional geographical terms, the project serves the development of the ‘Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT)’. However, the dredged silt and rocks were dumped into the sea, spreading outwards from the estuary. Although this area is a protected no-fishing zone and is situated some distance from the worksite, it was still affected. According to Nok, the spread of sediment has almost entirely destroyed the seagrass beds here. Members of SAN have encountered numerous dead dugongs in this region.

In 2020, the dredging operations sparked public protests. As a result, the government was forced to temporarily suspend the project and commission experts to conduct a new environmental impact assessment to identify suitable locations for silt disposal, ensuring the channel could be dredged without destroying the ecosystem or jeopardising the livelihoods of local fishers.

◉Construction area map from the EIA document; the blue line indicates the operational route from starting point A to the river mouth at endpoint B.

There were once over a thousand hectares of seagrass beds here, supporting Thailand’s largest population of dugongs. But Nok says the developers’ only explanation for this catastrophic outcome was: “at the time of construction, we believed the impact would be limited to the river channel”. It was only in 2024, four years after work stopped, that seagrass began to grow back here—the very patch beneath our feet.

According to a report by the US non-profit environmental news outlet Mongabay, Thailand’s dugong population was approximately 273 in 2022, with 90% living in the Andaman Sea; however, a third of that population may now have vanished. In 2024, at least 40% of dugong deaths were attributed to starvation caused by the large-scale depletion of seagrass.

A government scientist interviewed by Mongabay found that most of the dugongs in Trang have either died or are drifting along the coast in a desperate search for survival—some heading north towards Krabi, Phang Nga, and Phuket, and even as far as Myanmar; to the south, at least three dead dugongs were found near Langkawi in Malaysia. The scientist estimates that fewer than ten dugongs may remain in Trang province today.

Viewed in this light, seeing the recovering seagrass beds and the traces of dugongs feeding that day felt like witnessing a scene of survival against the odds. But Nok worries that those who fled also struggle to survive, as they must adapt to new environments and risk injury from colliding with unfamiliar fishing boats. “In Trang, the fishers know how to control their speed to avoid the dugongs; people elsewhere simply aren’t aware of this.” “Here,” he says, “we can protect them, but elsewhere, we are powerless.”

◉ A dugong feeding in a seagrass bed. Image source: WWF

The distant waters the dugongs swim to may not necessarily offer food; according to the aforementioned Mongabay report, there are almost no viable seagrass beds around Phuket. Government officials have even attempted to supplement the diet of migrating dugongs with foods such as kale and cabbage — the kind of diet typically given to rescued dugongs in aquariums.

While fishermen can plead and fight for their destroyed homes, only environmental NGOs like SAN can speak up for the dugongs, the seagrass, and the coral.

Libong Island also has a variety of long-leaf seagrass, a food source for sea turtles. However, Nok explained that this seagrass takes two years to mature enough to reproduce; if consumed by turtles during this period, it is difficult for the grass to spread into dense meadows. “Therefore, there is a conflict between conserving sea turtles and conserving seagrass,” they said, looking troubled, despite the fact that providing food for sea turtles is one of the primary goals of seagrass conservation.

In a manner resembling an experiment, they used bamboo poles and fishing nets to fence off a few square metres of the beach to plant long-leaf seagrass, but the results have been poor. When we visited, the area was almost entirely bare, with only a few scattered shoots of long-leaf seagrass poking through.

◉ The experiment to conserve long-leaf seagrass has not yet been successful.

III. Crab Bank

In the aforementioned Motano village, where houses were destroyed by storms, we also visited a crab bank. The ‘crabs’ refer to the local species, Blue Swimming Crabs (*Portunus pelagicus*), known in Chinese as lanhua xie or far-sea swimming crabs. The village comprises 300 households and 1,300 residents, whose livelihoods depend entirely on small-scale fishing, with blue swimming crabs serving as the primary source of income.

Since the 1990s, growing global demand for crab meat and unsustainable fishing practices, such as trawling, caused Thai blue swimming crab catches to peak in 1998 at 46,678 tonnes, far exceeding the maximum sustainable yield. To protect these fishery resources, the Thai government introduced a series of restoration policies, while community-led efforts also emerged—crab banks being one such initiative.

The crab bank we visited is located at a community conservation centre, housed in a simple wooden shed. A row of large blue plastic tubs lines the floor, while several glass fish tanks sit on a table, connected by a dense tangle of plastic tubing used to oxygenate the water. The village head reached into a tub and picked up a female crab, her underside a mass of bright orange eggs. Thousands of eggs are held against the female’s abdomen by mucus. The orange colour indicates that the eggs are still developing; the village head explained that when they turn grey, they are nearing the hatching stage and must be released back into the sea within five days.

◉ The blue swimming crab in the village head’s hand has a bright orange underside, indicating that the eggs are still developing.

These eggs hatch in the seawater into planktonic larvae, with a single batch potentially numbering from several hundred thousand to over a million. The village head believes that crab banks are effective for population recovery. He noted that whereas blue swimming crabs were previously catchable for only six months of the year, they can now be caught year-round, providing a vital source of livelihood.

The fishers have developed a habit of doing this not just for blue swimming crabs, but for other marine species during their breeding periods. We also saw squid eggs, resembling a cluster of transparent grapes; these had been brought back after being found tangled in a fishing net.

◉ Squid eggs brought back by the fishermen.
A question occurred to me: in the vast expanse of the ocean, does releasing these berried female crabs one by one actually make a difference?

According to Mongabay, data does indeed show that blue swimmer crab populations have increased since the introduction of crab banks and ‘other measures’. In 2017, Thailand’s Department of Fisheries, WWF, and several private sector partners jointly launched a ‘Fisheries Improvement Project’. The measures promoted include crab banks, seasonal bans on catching berried crabs, and restrictions on trawling and certain gear, such as crab pots with a mesh size of less than 6.4cm.

However, stock enhancement alone is not enough. Amonsak Sawusdee, a marine biologist who has studied blue swimmer crabs for decades, emphasises that it is equally vital to establish and enforce appropriate regulations on fishing gear and to create protected areas for spawning and juvenile crabs.

In the very same waters, industrial projects destroying vast seagrass beds coexist with the fishermen’s Sisyphean ‘crab banks’—a scene that, to an observer, seems utterly absurd. Yet, it is precisely this spontaneous action by the fishing community, in collaboration with NGOs, that has resisted destructive industrial projects and overfishing, thereby conserving native species.

How can a conservation model like this—one rooted in local knowledge and governed collectively by coastal communities—be normalised? LMMA offers one possibility: the ‘community-managed protected area’ model, a system of co-management between the government and the public.

IV.LMMA: Empowering Communities to Manage the Ocean

The LMMA (Locally Managed Marine Area) model is advocated by fishermen’s associations and NGOs in southern Thailand. LMMAs were first initiated spontaneously by communities in Pacific island nations, such as Fiji, in the 1990s, gradually evolving into a community-led, small-scale marine management model. The goal is to restore fishery resources and safeguard local livelihoods, rather than focusing on ‘pure conservation’. Around the year 2000, a pivotal organisation emerged: the LMMA Network. This transnational network, jointly promoted by international organisations, Pacific island governments, and community organisations, formally established the LMMA concept and helped it spread across the oceans to Southeast Asia, Africa, and beyond.

LMMAs emphasise the coexistence of conservation and livelihoods, as this is the only way for community residents to remain. The next entry in these notes will focus on how fishing communities explore their own livelihood models. In this piece, we first examine how a system involving diverse stakeholders—including governments, NGOs, and civil associations—is implemented on the ground.

◉ Villagers in Ankingameloka, near the Nosy Hara marine protected area in Madagascar, hold a meeting for their local LMMA. Image source: WWF

First, it should be noted that, as in China, marine and coastal resources (such as mangroves) in Thailand are state assets. The corresponding administrative body is the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources (DMCR). Community-Protected Areas are also managed by the DMCR. However, plots designated as Marine National Parks have a higher level of protection and are managed directly by the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation.

During our visit to the renowned Mu Ko Phetra National Park in Satun Province, we found two Community-Protected Areas tucked within its boundaries. The head of the local national park administration explained that since the park was established 42 years ago, it had been under “closed-off” management. In the field of biodiversity conservation, “nature reserves” are exclusive areas designated for the purpose of species protection—national parks being a prime example—but in many places, this has led to the exclusion of indigenous peoples.

However, the managers eventually realised that this was unsustainable and that local people should be allowed to make a living from the national park, provided it is done in a sustainable manner.

As we spoke, we stood beneath a blue sign erected last year. This is a public notice regarding the management rules of the Community-Protected Area, outlining its boundaries, prohibited activities (such as the use of illegal fishing gear), and penalties. The map in the centre of the sign represents the national park, with the yellow and orange zones marking the Community-Protected Areas of two respective villages.

◉ The signboard for the Community-Protected Area.

Fishing is strictly restricted throughout the National Park area; fishers who wish to fish may only use the most traditional gear. However, within the yellow and orange community protected areas shown in the map, fishers are permitted to engage in more extensive fishing and gathering. This comes with certain obligations: species monitoring, patrolling, and the construction of fish habitats. At first glance, it feels as though these two community protected areas are snatching a living from the jaws of the National Park; correspondingly, however, fishers must be able to prove that while pursuing their trade, they are also restoring the marine ecosystem.

This is where it becomes interesting: these community protected areas, known as LMMAs and managed by the DMCR, actually belong to the National Park. The governing authorities differ, and in terms of legal authority, the National Park Act supersedes the management framework of the community protected areas. In other words, the LMMA exists as a mode of governance embedded within the statutory framework of the National Park. Reaching this point has depended heavily on the long-term positive interaction and mutual trust between various government departments, fishers’ associations, and NGOs.

In practice, LMMAs are indeed implemented through consultation between the community and the government. Only areas that meet certain criteria can apply to become a community protected area: the community must have traditional or existing usage rights, a clear community organisation (such as the fishers’ associations we encountered on this trip), and an internal consensus to establish a set of management rules.

When it comes to “establishing management rules”, the role of NGOs is often indispensable. They primarily focus on raising awareness and capacity building within the community—teaching fishers how to monitor species, draw community maps, master meeting protocols, and understand legal knowledge. Externally, they act more as “intermediaries”, “translating” the community’s claims to rights into a language that is easier to communicate to the government and other stakeholders, particularly the “legalese” required for policy advocacy and legislative recommendations.

This bridging role was clearly reflected in the arrangement of our visit. Being able to meet and chat with the leadership of the National Park administration was actually arranged by the Thai Sea Watch Association (“Sea Watch”). Whether in the Sea Watch office, visiting fish conservation zones by boat, or sitting on the ground chatting with villagers in the community, the backgrounds of those present were diverse: community representatives, women’s representatives, local council members, and government officials—often from several departments, such as the DMCR and the Department of National Parks. Even though the process required sentence-by-sentence consecutive translation, which made for a long and tiring afternoon, they participated with great patience throughout.

Fishers are required to formulate their own community regulations. In Satun, fishers from several LMMAs collaborating with Sea Watch also had to name their respective protected areas; through this highly ritualistic act of “naming”, they felt a sense of community ownership.

The various government departments involved in LMMA management must also approve the management rules. Tab, the head of Sea Watch, showed us a Memorandum of Understanding signed by the community, the local government, and the NGO. Two enormous sheets of paper were densely covered in Thai script, detailing the management rules negotiated point by point and confirmed by all parties. There were 19 categories pertaining specifically to the community; for example, one rule states that no one may act alone, but must work with partners—who could be government departments, NGOs, or simply neighbours.

◉ The Memorandum of Understanding agreed between villagers and the government, facilitated by Ocean Observation.

Language is a tool for thought, and the creation of concepts is a common tactic used by NGOs in policy advocacy. For example, to drive global conservation efforts, the concept of OECM—Other Effective Area-based Conservation Measures—was introduced. Many LMMAs could be registered as OECMs, but Tab says they prefer the concept of LMMA.

OECMs refer to areas outside of protected areas that, through effective governance, achieve lasting in-situ biodiversity conservation, such as urban green spaces or nature-friendly farmland. In 2018, OECM became a formally defined statistical tool under the Convention on Biological Diversity, requiring national reporting to track global conservation goals and progress.

Whether they are protected areas or OECMs, these concepts have been pushed onto the global environmental governance agenda by international agencies; it is, in essence, a “top-down” process. Driven by international negotiations, OECM is becoming a common lingua franca recognised and utilised by governments and international organisations. Many community-protected areas have the potential to be declared OECMs—and while they may not receive direct financial support in the way protected areas do, the prestige of the OECM label makes it easier to attract external support, such as international partnerships or carbon credit projects.

Yet, NGOs and fishermen prefer the more grassroots concept of LMMA, which places a greater emphasis on community self-management. Tab’s indifference towards OECMs points to an interesting shift: grassroots NGOs seem less interested in the glamorous, grand concepts of international environmental governance frameworks, opting instead for approaches that reflect autonomy and provide tangible benefits.

◉ In 2025, the IUCN and UNEP released an updated map showing global protected areas. The green, purple, and orange colours in the image represent terrestrial protected areas, marine protected areas, and OECMs, respectively. Most countries, including China, have yet to declare OECMs. Source: protectedplanet.net

V. Resisting Carbon Sink ‘Land Grabbing’

In the Suso community of Trang Province, villagers have expressed their outright resistance to carbon sink projects.

This stems from the fact that the local mangroves were occupied for 21 years by a company under the pretext of a charcoal production concession. During that time, villagers were required to obtain company approval to use any timber—a process that was practically impossible—leaving them with no choice but to harvest wood in secret. Over time, they noticed that food was becoming increasingly scarce within and around the mangroves. They regard crabs and shellfish as indicator species for the health of the ecosystem; not only have these populations dwindled, but some types of seafood have vanished entirely.

The villagers believe this is a direct result of the company’s logging. A vivid example is the mud crab, which lives in burrows in the mud. Without the canopy of the mangroves, the mud is scorched by the sun, making it too hot for the crabs to survive. In short, without the mangroves, the wildlife lose their habitat, and the shoreline is transformed from a vibrant sanctuary into a wasteland.

◉ These holes are mud crab burrows. Mangroves do more than just provide a habitat for these crabs; the act of burrowing allows air to penetrate deep into the silt, alleviating oxygen deficiency in the soil—a process as vital to the mangroves as earthworms are to farmland.

Consequently, after the concession expired, some villagers, recognising the issue, took the initiative to plant trees. Five villages formed a mangrove conservation group and applied to the DMCR to establish a community protected area.

In 2024, the application was approved. They successfully secured a “community forest”, granting them management rights over the mangroves for ten years and providing a legal safeguard for the community’s right to use the resources.

◉ In the Suso community’s mangrove protected area, villagers have created their own species labels and nurseries… these not only facilitate their own planting efforts but also serve to educate visitors.
Perhaps scarred by previous experiences of land grabbing via concessions, the villagers here are wary of any external attempts to “enclose” their land. When asked for their views on carbon credit projects, representatives from the conservation group shook their heads repeatedly, insisting they were neither needed nor wanted. Having heard that such projects often involve 30-year contracts that lock away usage rights to the mangroves, they fear the various ways they earn a living from the forests will be restricted.

In 2025, a report by Thailand’s “Knowledge for Development Foundation” found that, against the backdrop of the climate crisis, the Thai government has vigorously promoted voluntary emission reduction schemes. These allow companies to purchase carbon credits to offset their greenhouse gas emissions by funding mangrove restoration. However, the implementation of these schemes at the grassroots level has triggered severe inequalities. In some existing projects, for example, the profit distribution sees companies taking 70%, the community receiving only 20%, and the DMCR taking 10%—yet neither the companies nor the government have ever transparently explained the basis for this allocation to the community.

Furthermore, the DMCR and corporations often bypass the wider village population, dealing directly with village heads or specific representatives for signatures. Some villagers have even been coerced into signing agreements under pressure from government officials without understanding the terms of the contract. These top-down, opaque manoeuvres have sparked suspicion and division within the community.

In an interview with HaRDstories, Tab argued that mangrove carbon credit projects cannot truly address global warming. “The principle established by the UN is that those who emit are responsible for the remedy, yet this has been twisted into a scheme for a carbon market,” he said. “Solving global warming requires reducing emissions, not using money to seize things that do not belong to them.”

Now, with the establishment of community-protected areas, residents feel more empowered to say no to such land-grabbing schemes.

Coming Next

This is the second of three field notes from Foodthink’s visit to small-scale fishing communities in Southern Thailand. The first, &u201cProtecting the Sea for Thirty Years: Unity is the Key to Plenty | A Visit to Small-Scale Fishing Communities in Southern Thailand&u201d, discusses how small-scale fishers in Satun Province joined forces to drive out commercial trawlers, and how local fishers’ associations further organised into a national alliance to actively engage in legislative and policy advocacy. To learn how conservation and development coexist within local fishing communities, please look out for the third and final article.

Foodthink Author

Kong Lingyu

Project Director at Foodthink. Focusing on climate, environment, and agri-food issues.

 

 

 

 

Unless otherwise stated, photos in this article were taken by the author

Editor: Pei Dan