commercial fisheries
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Author(s):  
Torbjörn Jansson ◽  
Staffan Waldo

AbstractThis paper develops a model based on the concept of Positive Mathematical Programming (PMP) that is useful for ex-ante analyses of how policy measures affect commercial fisheries. PMP models are frequently used in agriculture, but rarely for analyzing fisheries. Fisheries often face a large set of constraints such as effort regulations and catch quotas of which some might be binding and others not. An econometric approach is developed for calibrating models with both binding and non-binding constraints. The interaction between seals and Swedish fisheries is used as an empirical application. Seal interaction is modeled as seals predating fish from passive gear (nets and hooks), which is primarily an issue for the coastal fishery. The model contains 24 fleet segments involved in 247 different fishing activities in 2012. The results show that if no further management action is taken, fisheries using passive gear will reduce their activities from about 46 000 days at sea per year to about 41 000 and reducing their economic performance from losses of about 2 million Euros to about 3.3 million. The impact from seals can be reduced by reducing the seal population or providing economic compensation. 


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 403-425
Author(s):  
Wendylee Stott ◽  
Tom MacDougall ◽  
Edward F. Roseman ◽  
Stephen Lenart ◽  
Justin Chiotti ◽  
...  

Ostrich ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
OB Masiko ◽  
PG Ryan ◽  
CD van der Lingen ◽  
L Upfold ◽  
S Somhlaba ◽  
...  

Fisheries ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis L. Scarnecchia ◽  
Jason D. Schooley ◽  
Alec R. Lackmann ◽  
Steven J. Rider ◽  
Dennis K. Riecke ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie‐Christine Rufener ◽  
Kasper Kristensen ◽  
J. Rasmus Nielsen ◽  
Francois Bastardie

2021 ◽  
pp. 072519-0103R1
Author(s):  
Richard T. Melstrom ◽  
Anna A. Klis

2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (30) ◽  
pp. e2100869118
Author(s):  
Mark G. Meekan ◽  
Conrad W. Speed ◽  
Robert D. McCauley ◽  
Rebecca Fisher ◽  
Matthew J. Birt ◽  
...  

Seismic surveys are used to locate oil and gas reserves below the seabed and can be a major source of noise in marine environments. Their effects on commercial fisheries are a subject of debate, with experimental studies often producing results that are difficult to interpret. We overcame these issues in a large-scale experiment that quantified the impacts of exposure to a commercial seismic source on an assemblage of tropical demersal fishes targeted by commercial fisheries on the North West Shelf of Western Australia. We show that there were no short-term (days) or long-term (months) effects of exposure on the composition, abundance, size structure, behavior, or movement of this fauna. These multiple lines of evidence suggest that seismic surveys have little impact on demersal fishes in this environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajkumar Rajan ◽  
P. T. Rajan ◽  
S. S. Mishra ◽  
Abdul Raheem C. N. ◽  
Shrinivaasu S. ◽  
...  

AbstractExtensive studies on fish diversity in Lakshadweep waters began with Jones and Kumaran’s in 1964. Reports after these authors were sparse and sporadic until the turn of this century. Although recent reports have increased the tally, targeted studies are lacking, and there is a possibility of listing more species for this region. Studies on the diversity and abundance of fishes are due, given the atoll system undergoing rapid changes: structural decline due to several bleaching related coral mortality events, changes in the seagrass meadows, and the increase in fishing reef-associated species. These circumstances call for a revised checklist of fishes for this region, for the latest dates back to 1991. Thus, we present an inventory of ichthyofauna of Lakshadweep atolls based on published literature and incorporating 15 new species records identified through a rapid survey. The new species records for this region are presented here with the diagnostics of these species. The checklist shows 856 species of 432 genera, 43 orders, and 144 families known from these islands, including 16 freshwater forms. 49.3% of the contribution is from 14 fish families having > 15 species each, while the remainder 131 families contributed 52.5%, which have < 15 species. About 154 species belonging to 12 families are known to contribute to the commercial fisheries of these islands. The new records reported in this work for this region are found in the Maldives, and Sri Lanka proves the zoogeographical affinity of these two regions with the Lakshadweep archipelago.


Author(s):  
Steven G. Morgan

AbstractStock-recruitment relationships for managing commercial fisheries are difficult to measure and notoriously poor, so marine ecologists have relied on larval recruitment as a proxy for how planktonic processes regulate populations and communities. However, my literature review revealed that coupling between reproductive output and recruitment in benthic populations was common, occurring in 62% of 112 studies and 64% of 81 species. Coupling was considerably stronger for studies on brooders (72%) than broadcast-spawners (46%) and taxa with short (74%) than long (56%) planktonic larval durations (PLDs); hence, it was highest for brooders with short PLDs (94%). Coupling was similar in studies on benthic animals (63%) and seagrasses and kelp (56%). Coupling was detected more often by quantifying both reproductive output and settlement (79%) than adult density and recruitment (60%). It also was detected in 83% of just 21% of studies that estimated dispersal. Coupling was even detected by 55% of the 46% of studies conducted at just one site and 58% of the 65% of studies lasting no longer than 3 years. Decoupling was detected 33 times in invertebrates and fishes, occurring more often in the plankton (48.5%) and during reproduction (45.5%) than after settlement (6%), and nine times in seagrasses and kelp, occurring more often during reproduction (44.4%) than postsettlement (33.3%) or in the plankton (22.2%). Widespread coupling between reproductive output and settlement for sedentary, benthic species suggests that the poor stock-recruitment relationships typical of vagile, wide-ranging, pelagic species may be due more to the difficulty of detecting them than decoupling.


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