Lessons for resource conservation from two contrasting small-scale fisheries

被引:0
|
作者
Hampus Eriksson
Maricela de la Torre-Castro
Steven W. Purcell
Per Olsson
机构
[1] WorldFish,Australian National Centre for Ocean Resources and Security (ANCORS)
[2] University of Wollongong,Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences
[3] Stockholm University,Department of Physical Geography
[4] Stockholm University,Stockholm Resilience Centre
[5] Stockholm University,National Marine Science Centre
[6] Southern Cross University,undefined
来源
AMBIO | 2015年 / 44卷
关键词
Adaptive management; Coral reef; Fisheries; Governance; Invertebrate; Sea cucumber;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Small-scale fisheries present challenges to management due to fishers’ dependency on resources and the adaptability of management systems. We compared social-ecological processes in the sea cucumber fisheries of Zanzibar and Mayotte, Western Indian Ocean, to better understand the reasons for resource conservation or collapse. Commercial value of wild stocks was at least 30 times higher in Mayotte than in Zanzibar owing to lower fishing pressure. Zanzibar fishers were financially reliant on the fishery and increased fishing effort as stocks declined. This behavioral response occurred without adaptive management and reinforced an unsustainable fishery. In contrast, resource managers in Mayotte adapted to changing fishing effort and stock abundance by implementing a precautionary fishery closure before crossing critical thresholds. Fishery closure may be a necessary measure in small-scale fisheries to preserve vulnerable resources until reliable management systems are devised. Our comparison highlighted four poignant lessons for managing small-scale fisheries: (1) diagnose the fishery regularly, (2) enable an adaptive management system, (3) constrain exploitation within ecological limits, and (4) share management responsibility.
引用
收藏
页码:204 / 213
页数:9
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