Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

De Wit R., Chaubron-Couturier P., Galletti Florence. (2021). Diversity of property regimes of Mediterranean coastal lagoons in S. France : implications for coastal zone management. Ocean and Coastal Management, 207, 105579 [11 p.]. ISSN 0964-5691.

Titre du document
Diversity of property regimes of Mediterranean coastal lagoons in S. France : implications for coastal zone management
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000663342600012
Auteurs
De Wit R., Chaubron-Couturier P., Galletti Florence
Source
Ocean and Coastal Management, 2021, 207, 105579 [11 p.] ISSN 0964-5691
We provide a cartography of the current property regimes of permanent coastal lagoons along the coastlines of the Mediterranean Sea for continental France and Corsica, which include both private and public properties. In France, for the latter, the State Domain Code and the General Code of the property of public persons make a clear difference between Public Domain and private property of the different public entities. Public domain represents property that is imprescriptible and inalienable, i.e. the property rights cannot be changed in the future and neither transferred nor sold to somebody else. In contrast, private properties of public entities can be sold or transferred to thirds. Maritime Public Domain (DPM) was created since 1681. DPM has accommodated Public Domain for the French coastal lagoons following their legal definition as & ldquo;salty ponds (French e & acute;tangs sale & acute;s) with a direct, natural and permanent connection with the sea & rdquo;. However, private landlords battled juridically with the State for centuries both by attacking the pertinence of this definition and claiming ancestral property rights. As a result, before 1980, more than half of the coastal lagoons comprised private properties, representing about a quarter of the lagoon surface. Twelve of 40 coastal lagoons comprise DPM, mainly the larger lagoons (e.g., SalsesLeucate, many lagoons close to Narbonne, Thau lagoon, Berre lagoon), representing 65% of the total lagoon surface. Since its foundation in 1975, the Conservatoire du Littoral, a public body in charge of coastal nature protection, has bought private coastal lagoons properties in twenty of 40 lagoons, representing 22% of the total lagoon surface. These have been designated as inalienable and imprescriptible & ldquo;Public Domain of the Conservatoire & rdquo;, safeguarded for nature conservation purposes. Nowadays, private ownership still persists in 13 lagoons representing 3.3% of total surface. The Coastal lagoons in Roussillon (Etangs du Canet and Salses-Leucate), the He & acute;rault department, in the Camargue and in Corsica currently show variable and sometimes fragmented ownership (in addition to the Conservatoire, DPM, private ownership, municipalities, departments). Fragmented ownership is a clear difficulty for the integrated management of coastal lagoons. With currently, 87% of the coastal lagoons as Public Domain, public law and the environmental code have to evolve to tackle the challenges for the conservation and management of coastal lagoons and their connectivity with the other ecosystems on land and in the sea.
Plan de classement
Ecologie, systèmes aquatiques [036] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082] ; Politique [114]
Description Géographique
FRANCE ; MEDITERRANEE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010082202]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010082202
Contact