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Registros recuperados: 109
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Individual transferable quota contribution to environmental stewardship: a theory in need of validation Ecology and Society
van Putten, Ingrid; CSIRO Wealth from Oceans National Research Flagship, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research; Ingrid.vanputten@csiro.au; Boschetti, Fabio; CSIRO Wealth from Oceans National Research Flagship, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research; fabio.Boschetti@csiro.au; Fulton, Elizabeth A.; CSIRO Wealth from Oceans National Research Flagship, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research; beth.fulton@csiro.au; Smith, Anthony D. M.; CSIRO Wealth from Oceans National Research Flagship, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research; tony.d.smith@csiro.au; Thebaud, Olivier; CSIRO Wealth from Oceans National Research Flagship, CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research; olivier.thebaud@csiro.au.
We explored the extent to which (1) individual transferable quotas (ITQs) may lead to changes in environmental stewardship and (2) environmental stewardship may in turn contribute to explain the success or otherwise of ITQs in meeting sustainability objectives. ITQs are an example of incentive-based fisheries management in which fishing rights can be privately owned and traded. ITQs are aimed at resolving the problems created by open-access fisheries. ITQs were proposed to promote economic efficiency, and there is growing empirical evidence that ITQs meet a number of economic and social fisheries management objectives. Even though improved stock status arises as a consequence of the total allowable catch levels implemented together with ITQs, the effect is...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Comanagement; Environmental ethics; Fisheries management; Fishing rights; Stewardship.
Ano: 2014
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Social networks and fishers’ behavior: exploring the links between information flow and fishing success in the Northumberland lobster fishery Ecology and Society
Turner, Rachel A.; Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies, University of the West Indies; turnerrachela@gmail.com; Polunin, Nicholas V. C.; School of Marine Science and Technology, Newcastle University, UK; n.polunin@ncl.ac.uk; Stead, Selina M.; School of Marine Science and Technology, Newcastle University, UK; selina.stead@ncl.ac.uk.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Fisheries management; Fishers’ Behavior; Fishing success; Information sharing; Lobster fisheries; Social network analysis.
Ano: 2014
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Individual transferable quotas and conservation: a critical assessment Ecology and Society
Acheson, James; University of Maine; acheson@maine.edu; Apollonio, Spencer; ; spencerapollonio@yahoo.com; Wilson, James; University of Maine; jwilson@maine.edu.
Individual transferable quotas (ITQs) have become a popular management tool for fisheries. They have been promoted in some quarters and seriously criticized in others because of their social and economic impacts. A more serious problem is that ITQs provide exclusive access to public resources presumably in return for some public benefit, namely conservation; however, in a high percentage of cases they do not conserve fish stocks. In this article, we focus on the reasons that ITQs do not conserve stocks. We point to a number of phenomena identified in the literature as affecting stocks of fish, including problems with total allowable catch (TAC), ecological hierarchy theory, r and K species, the Allee effect, scale and metapopulation structure, the need to...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Fisheries management; Individual transferable quota; ITQs; Quota management.
Ano: 2015
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The capacity to adapt?: communities in a changing climate, environment, and economy on the northern Andaman coast of Thailand Ecology and Society
Bennett, Nathan J.; Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, University of British Columbia; nathan.bennett@ubc.ca; Dearden, Philip; Department of Geography, University of Victoria; pdearden@office.geog.uvic.ca; Murray, Grant; Institute for Coastal Research, Vancouver Island University; Grant.Murray@viu.ca; Kadfak, Alin; School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg; alin.kadfak@globalstudies.gu.se.
The health and productivity of marine ecosystems, habitats, and fisheries are deteriorating on the Andaman coast of Thailand. Because of their high dependence on natural resources and proximity to the ocean, coastal communities are particularly vulnerable to climate-induced changes in the marine environment. These communities must also adapt to the impacts of management interventions and conservation initiatives, including marine protected areas, which have livelihood implications. Further, communities on the Andaman coast are also experiencing a range of new economic opportunities associated in particular with tourism and agriculture. These complex and ongoing changes require integrated assessment of, and deliberate planning to increase, the adaptive...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Adaptive capacity; Alternative livelihoods; Climate change; Coastal communities; Fisheries management; Marine protected areas; Social resilience; Thailand.
Ano: 2014
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Perceived Benefits of Fisheries Management Restrictions in Madagascar Ecology and Society
McClanahan, Tim R.; Wildlife Conservation Society; tmcclanahan@wcs.org; Cinner, Joshua E.; ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies; joshua.cinner@jcu.edu.au; Abunge, Caroline; Wildlife Conservation Society;; Rabearisoa, Ando; Conservation International;; Mahatante, Paubert; University of Toliara;; Ramahatratra, Frederick; University of Toliara;; Andrianarivelo, Norbert; Wildlife Conservation Society;.
Perceptions of the benefits of fisheries management restrictions were evaluated in coastal Madagascar to identify restrictions that are likely to be self- and community enforced. The survey focused on 24 Malagasy fishing villages adjacent to coral reefs. Resource users' perceptions of the benefits of restrictions were generally high and widespread, but some less positive perceptions were found in three villages located near marine protected areas. Perceptions of the benefits of gear restrictions had widespread support; closed areas, seasons, and minimum sizes of fish were less common; and restrictions on species were supported infrequently. We therefore advocate a management implementation approach that uses these scales of perceived benefits and...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Attitudes; Fisheries management; Marine protected area planning; Poverty; Social-ecological.
Ano: 2014
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Social-Ecological Scale Mismatches and the Collapse of the Sea Urchin Fishery in Maine, USA Ecology and Society
Johnson, Teresa R.; School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine; teresa.johnson@maine.edu; Wilson, James A.; School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine; Jwilson@maine.edu; Cleaver, Caitlin; School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine; caitlin.cleaver@maine.edu; Vadas, Robert L.; School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine; School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine; vadas@maine.edu.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Collective action; Co-management; Fisheries management; Kelp; Maine USA; Ocean fisheries; Scale mismatches; Sea urchin fishery.
Ano: 2012
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Who is Right to Fish? Evolving a Social Contract for Ethical Fisheries Ecology and Society
Lam, Mimi E.; Policy and Ecosystem Restoration in Fisheries, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia; m.lam@fisheries.ubc.ca; Pauly, Daniel; Sea Around Us Project, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia; d.pauly@fisheries.ubc.ca.
Most debates on government fisheries management, focusing on dramatic fishery collapses, have skirted the ethical dimension implicit in the exploitation, for private gain, of fishery resources that are publicly owned. The privilege to fish, a conditional right often nefariously perceived as a legislated “right,” implies ethical responsibilities linked to marine stewardship. To date, however, granting this privilege to fish has not been legally tethered to the fiduciary responsibilities of businesses to their clients or governments to their citizens: sustainable management of fisheries and conservation of living marine resources. Legal rights must be coupled with moral responsibilities if governments, private fishing enterprises,...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Insight Palavras-chave: Collaborative governance; Corporate responsibility; Fisheries management; Fishing privileges; Marine stewardship; Public ownership; Subsidies; Tragedy of the commons.
Ano: 2010
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Haida Marine Planning: First Nations as a Partner in Marine Conservation Ecology and Society
Jones, Russ; Haida Fisheries Program; russ.jones@haidanation.net; Rigg, Catherine; Haida Fisheries Program;; Lee, Lynn; School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University ;.
The Haida Nation is involved in an integrated marine planning initiative in northern British Columbia, Canada. The Haida continue to occupy traditional territory in and around Haida Gwaii, or the Queen Charlotte Islands, and are engaged in a larger planning process for the Pacific North Coast Integrated Management Area (PNCIMA). This initiative is in the early planning stage, focused on capacity building and creating enabling conditions for co-governance. Court decisions, government policies, and a modern treaty process are driving short- and long-term efforts to resolve issues of Aboriginal ownership and resource access, both on land and in the ocean. As a result, the PNCIMA process is being led by two levels of government, First Nations and federal,...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Aboriginal rights; Fisheries management; Indigenous peoples; Integrated coastal management; Marine planning; Oceans governance.
Ano: 2010
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Considering Other Consumers: Fisheries, Predators, and Atlantic Herring in the Gulf of Maine Ecology and Society
Read, Andrew J; Duke University; aread@duke.edu; Brownstein, Carrie R; Duke University; cbrownstein@audubon.org.
After decades of overexploitation and severe depletion, Atlantic herring stocks in waters of the northeastern United States have recovered. Fishery managers now consider the herring resource to be underexploited. Nevertheless, some fishery managers and sustainable fishery advocates in New England have expressed concern that the fishery management plan may not adequately consider the importance of herring as prey for marine mammals, seabirds, and piscivorous fish. Several studies suggest that consumption by these predators is significant, yet trophic interactions are not explicitly considered in stock assessment models. Instead, as in most fisheries stock assessments, predation is subsumed within the natural mortality rate, and no empirical estimates of...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Atlantic herring; Ecosystem management; Fisheries management; Gulf of Maine; Marine mammals; Piscivores; Protected species; Single-species approach; Stock assessment; Trophic interactions.
Ano: 2003
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Fishful Thinking: Rhetoric, Reality, and the Sea Before Us Ecology and Society
Pitcher, Tony J.; Policy and Ecosystem Restoration in Fisheries, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia.; pitcher.t@gmail.com; Lam, Mimi E; Policy and Ecosystem Restoration in Fisheries, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia.; m.lam@fisheries.ubc.ca.
Fisheries science and management have been shrouded in controversy and rhetoric for over 125 yrs. Human reliance on fish through history (and even prehistory) has impacted the sea and its resources. Global impacts are manifest today in threatened food security and vulnerable marine ecosystems. Growing consumer demand and subsidized industrial fisheries exacerbate ecosystem degradation, climate change, global inequities, and local poverty. Ten commonly advocated fisheries management solutions, if implemented alone, cannot remedy a history of intense fishing and serial stock depletions. Fisheries policy strategies evaluated along five performance modalities (ecological, economic, social, ethical, and institutional) suggest that composite management...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Back-to-the-future; Ecological ethics; Ecosystem restoration; Fisheries management; Fishing down the food web; Food security; Policy goals; The sea ahead; Trade-offs.
Ano: 2010
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The Social Construction of Fishing, 1949 Ecology and Society
Finley, Carmel; Department of History, Oregon State University; carmel.finley@oregonstate.edu.
The theoretical construction known as maximum sustained yield (MSY) exists in three realms: as science, as policy, and as a legal concept. Despite substantial criticism by scientists and economists, MSY remains at the heart of fisheries science and fisheries management. This paper suggests that its institutional resilience springs more from its policy and legal roles than from its scientific strength. Maximum sustained yield was adopted as the goal of American fisheries policy in 1949. Between 1949 and 1955, the State Department pushed for its adoption internationally. In this paper, I first look briefly at the relationship between fishing and foreign policy goals during this period. Second, I look at how fishing was understood during 1949, when the...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Fisheries history; Fisheries management; Milner B. Schaefer; Salmon; Surplus production theory; Wilbert M. Chapman; William C. Herrington.
Ano: 2009
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What does stakeholder involvement mean for fisheries management? Ecology and Society
Bloomfield, Helen J.; University of Liverpool; H.J.Bloomfield@liverpool.ac.uk.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Fisheries management; Stakeholder involvement; Stakeholder preferences.
Ano: 2014
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Merits and Limits of Ecosystem Protection for Conserving Wild Salmon in a Northern Coastal British Columbia River Ecology and Society
Hill, Aaron C.; Watershed Watch Salmon Society; Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana; hillfish@telus.net; Bansak, Thomas S.; Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana; tom.bansak@umontana.edu; Ellis, Bonnie K.; Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana; bonnie.ellis@umontana.edu; Stanford, Jack A.; Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana; jack.stanford@umontana.edu.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Conservation; Ecology; Fisheries management; Habitat; Kitlope River; Pacific salmon; Resilience; Salmon stronghold.
Ano: 2010
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Manual para gestão da água e de resíduos do processamento de peixes. Infoteca-e
LUIZ, D. de B.; SANTOS, V. R. V. dos; LIMA, L. K. F. de; FRITZ, A. R. M.; BRIGIDA, A. I. S.; SOUZA, A. L. M. de; MUÑOZ, A. E. P.; FURTADO, A. A. L.; MESQUITA, E. de F. M. de; PONSANO, E. H. G.; GUIMARÃES, J. de T.; NAVAL, L. P.; RODRIGUES, L. G. G.; IWASHITA, M. K. P.; CHICRALA, P. C. M. S.; MOREIRA, R. de F. P. M.; BORGHESI, R.; ALVES, R. R.; MARTO, V. C. de O..
O Manual para gestão da água e de resíduos do processamento de peixes é uma publicação técnica que aborda de forma organizada e didática duas questões fundamentais para gestão das indústrias de processamento de pescados nos tempos atuais: consumo de água e geração de resíduos. Para isso, reunimos uma equipe multidisciplinar com conhecimento em legislação, produção e sanidade de peixes, processamento de alimentos, melhoria de processos industriais, microbiologia, economia e estatística. Esse contexto ganha relevância diante da frequência com que diversas regiões no planeta têm sofrido com a escassez de água e com a contaminação química e orgânica dos corpos hídricos, em razão do descarte incorreto de resíduos e efluentes gerados nas indústrias. O foco no...
Tipo: Livros Palavras-chave: Pesca Industrial; Tecnologia de Alimento; Recurso Hídrico; Processamento; Produto Derivado de Pescado; Água; Resíduo; Industrialization; Fish; Water; Processing residues; Fisheries management.
Ano: 2020 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1127919
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Sistema de Controle de Pesca de Mato Grosso do Sul SCPESCA/MS 22-2016. Infoteca-e
CATELLA, A. C.; CAMPOS, F. L. de R.; ALBUQUERQUE, S. P..
Este é o 23º Boletim de Pesquisa do Sistema de Controle da Pesca de Mato Grosso do Sul - SCPESCA/MS. A Embrapa Pantanal publica essas informações em parceria com a Secretaria de Estado de Meio Ambiente, Desenvolvimento Econômico, Produção e Agricultura Familiar por meio do Instituto de Meio Ambiente de Mato Grosso do Sul, juntamente com o 15º Batalhão de Polícia Militar Ambiental de Mato Grosso do Sul. A pesca é uma atividade de considerável expressão econômica e social no Estado e seu monitoramento na Bacia do Alto Paraguai pelo SCPESCA/MS constitui um exemplo gratificante de parceria entre instituições que atuam no Pantanal. Por meio deste Sistema, que não seria possível sem esse esforço conjunto, são obtidos dados sobre a pesca profissional artesanal,...
Tipo: Livros Palavras-chave: Bacia do Alto Paraguai; Fishery statistics; Upper Paraguay River Basin; Estatística pesqueira; Peixe; Pesca; Fisheries statistics; Fisheries; Fisheries management; Pantanal.
Ano: 2017 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1086144
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Sistema de Controle de Pesca de Mato Grosso do Sul SCPESCA/MS 22-2015. Infoteca-e
CATELLA, A. C.; CAMPOS, F. L. de R.; ALBUQUERQUE, S. P..
Neste boletim encontram-se as informações sobre a pesca profissional artesanal e esportiva (pesca recreativa) coletadas e analisadas por meio do Sistema de Controle da Pesca de Mato Grosso do Sul (SCPESCA/MS) no ano de 2015. Os dados obtidos são provenientes do pescado capturado em toda a Bacia do Alto Paraguai em Mato Grosso do Sul (BAP/MS) e vistoriado pela Polícia Militar Ambiental/MS. Foi registrado um total de 363 t de pescado, das quais 180 t (49,5%) foram capturadas pela pesca profissional (estimativa de captura) e 183 t (50,5%) pela pesca esportiva. As espécies mais capturadas pelas duas categorias juntas foram: pintado Pseudoplatystoma corruscans (79,5 t, 22%), pacu Piaractus mesopotamicus (60,8 t, 17 %) e cachara Pseudoplatystoma reticulatum...
Tipo: Livros Palavras-chave: Bacia do Alto Paraguai; Upper Paraguay River Basin; Fishery statistics; Peixe; Estatística pesqueira; Pesca; Fisheries statistics; Fisheries management; Fisheries; Pantanal.
Ano: 2016 URL: http://www.infoteca.cnptia.embrapa.br/infoteca/handle/doc/1065674
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Distributional issues in the operation of rights-based fisheries management systems ArchiMer
Guyader, Olivier; Thebaud, Olivier.
Rights-based management regimes are considered by economists as an important solution to the problems of excess capacity and biological over-harvesting of fisheries. In practice, adoption of such regimes, and particularly of those relying on individual quota allocations, has often met with resistance from within the fisheries concerned. A key reason for this resistance appears to be the distributional conflicts which arise in the process of implementing the regimes. An economic analysis of the nature of these conflicts in the different contexts in which they have been observed is proposed. The approach centres on the way in which distributional conflicts can influence the operation of management systems and their impacts on fisheries, from the country to...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Fisheries management; Rights-based management; Individual transferable quotas; Distributional issues; Economic simulation.
Ano: 2001 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00244/35524/34808.pdf
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How to provide scientific advice for ecosystem-based management now ArchiMer
Trenkel, Verena.
n this paper, I argue that we have at hand what is needed to provide scientific advice for ecosystem-based management of small pelagics and other species groups now. The ingredients for this advice are (i) large marine ecosystems as spatial management units; (ii) maintaining ecosystem productivity and exploiting at multispecies maximum yield as overarching management objectives; (iii) assessment of ecosystems by evaluating changes in primary productivity; (iv) an operational management procedure in which single-species catch proposals are adjusted to ecosystem productivity using a set of control rules. Inspection of historic landings for small pelagics and other small species in the Northeast Atlantic (ICES area) reveals that most likely fisheries...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: EBFM; Fisheries management; Fisheries yield; Primary production.
Ano: 2018 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00416/52784/53851.pdf
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Catalogue international des activités des flottilles de Manche, approche des interactions techniques ArchiMer
Tetard, A; Boon, M; Bennett, D; Berthou, Patrick; Bossy, S; Casey, J; De Clerck, R; Delpech, Jean-paul; Dintheer, C; Giret, M; Large, P; Latrouite, Daniel; Lemoine, Michel; Millner, R; Morizur, Yvon; Ozanne, S; Palmer, D; Pawson, M; Pickett, G; Vince, M.
This work is the result of collaboration between the English, French, Channel Isles and Belgian laboratories which are involved in a study of the English Channel. Its subject is the activities of fleets and fleet interactions, and it complements other work on the biogeographical identification of Channel fish and shellfish stocks (published), and on modelling the fleets' interactions as they exploit the resources (in preparation). The concept of a métier is defined as being the use of one fishing gear to catch one or several species targeted during a particular season in a given area. On this basis, 74 métiers were identified during 1989-90. For each métier we give a brief description of the catching gear, the target species and most usual by-catch, the...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Fisheries management; Fishing effort; Technical interactions; English Channel; Métier; Gestion des pêcheries; Distribution de l'effort de pêche; Interactions techniques; Manche; Métiers.
Ano: 1993 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/1993/rapport-704.pdf
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Functional differences between fish communities on artificial and natural reefs: a case study along the French Catalan coast ArchiMer
Koeck, Barbara; Tessier, Anne; Brind'Amour, Anik; Pastor, Jeremy; Bijaoui, Benjamin; Dalias, Nicolas; Astruch, Patrick; Saragoni, Gilles; Lenfant, Philippe.
In the context of growing anthropogenic disturbances that deeply alter marine coastal ecosystems, various management tools are used to protect biodiversity, such as fishing gear limitations, fishing quotas, protected areas or the creation of artificial reefs (ARs). In contrast to the other management tools, ARs require a modification of natural habitats. We used underwater visual censuses to investigate the effect of habitat modification on the structure of fish communities by comparing a natural reef (NR) to ARs with different habitat complexity. Different fish assemblage descriptors were used to assess species- and functional- and community-level aspects of the assemblages. ARs were rapidly colonized by adult fishes and presented community compositions...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Ecological niche; Fish community; Fisheries management; Functional diversity; Gulf of Lion; Habitat complexity; Mediterranean Sea; Underwater visual census.
Ano: 2014 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00189/30029/28514.pdf
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