. Earth Science News .
WATER WORLD
Kenya's Fisheries Management Promotes Species That Grow Larger And Live Longer

Dr. Caleb McClennen, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Marine Program, said: "This important comparison of various fisheries management systems over time demonstrates the critical need to move past unregulated open-access fishing in resource poor countries around the world. This empirical evidence demonstrates how both fishers and their supporting ecosystems can and do benefit from restrictions and improved management,"
by Staff Writers
Nairobi, Kenya (SPX) Feb 14, 2011
Marine conservationists from the Wildlife Conservation Society working in Kenya have found that better fisheries management that includes restricting fishing gear is producing more predatory and longer-lived species and is improving fishing even in adjacent areas where no management is taking place.

During a 10-year study, conservationists recording fish catches found that the implementation of fishing regulations-and particularly the banning of small-mesh seine nets that indiscriminately capture all fish-allowed practically all fish species to recover, especially those species that took longer to reproduce.

Fish communities in regulated sites also had a greater diversity of predatory fish species and those with longer life spans. Even in unregulated areas there were small improvements to the fish community.

The study appears in the February print version of Fisheries Management and Ecology. The authors of the study include Dr. Tim McClanahan of the Wildlife Conservation Society and Christina Hicks of James Cook University in Australia.

The study examined the effects of increasing fisheries management and fishing gear restrictions in 11 coral reef sites along the 75-kilometer stretch of Kenyan coast around the city of Mombasa for a 10-year period.

The wholesale removal of fine-mesh seine nets was implemented in six sites to the south of Mombasa, all of which were more than 30 kilometers away from areas closed to fishing. Kenyatta Beach-a landing site and popular tourist destination near Mombasa Marine National Park-served as the study's most intensively regulated site.

The northernmost sites, where fishermen continued to use seine nets in spite of restrictions, were within five kilometers of the fisheries closure zones. In addition to seine nets, other types of gear examined in the study were traps, lines, regular nets, and spears.

"The study shows that regulating coastal fisheries allows fish populations to recover in a number of predictable ways that correspond with knowledge of the biology and ecological characteristics of individual species, but also that the recovery was faster then predicted for some species," said Dr. Tim McClanahan, WCS Senior Conservationist and head of the society's coral reef research and conservation program.

From February 1998 to August 2007, researchers identified and measured individual fish from 152 species caught at each of the 11 sites-with 15 species representing approximately 90 percent of the data pool-as well as recording the gear used.

On average, all fish species from regulated sites over the course of the study increased in body length over time, with two species-the rabbitfish (averaging a short lifespan of 5.9 years) and seagrass parrotfish (averaging a intermediate lifespan of 7.7 years)-exhibiting the most significant size increases following fishing regulations.

The unregulated northern sites were dominated by short-lived herbivorous species and the very few species that were able to escape the gaps of small-meshed nets.

Predictably, the largest and longest lived fish were landed at the most regulated site (Kenyatta), and the smallest in the least regulated. Further, spears and gill nets caught the largest fish in the study, whereas the smallest were caught in seines and lines. Also, fish body lengths in the sites where seine net bans were implemented and enforced during the study were growing to the same lengths as fish from the most regulated site by the end of the study.

Dr. McClanahan said the improvements even in the unregulated areas suggest that strong management can improve conditions in adjacent areas where management is weak.

"This can lead to either free loading on the nearby stronger management or increased interests in participating in the improved management, depending on the interests, incentives, and organization of the fishing and management community," McClanahan said.

The study builds on a previous WCS study from the same sites on the costs and revenues of local fisheries along the coast of Kenya, which was published last year in Conservation Biology and demonstrated that effective fisheries management actually yields more profits for fishermen. In terms of income, fishermen working in Kenyatta experienced a 60 percent increase in revenue (from 224 up to 374 Kenya shillings, or $3 up to $5) following the beach seine ban in 2001.

By contrast, daily income in the northern sites averaged $2 per person between 2002-2007. Overall, fishing revenue in the southern landing sites (all of which banned beach seines during the study period) was 41 percent higher than northern coast sites with the beach seines; Kenyatta's fishing revenue climbed to 135 percent higher than northern sites after seine elimination.

Dr. Caleb McClennen, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Marine Program, said: "This important comparison of various fisheries management systems over time demonstrates the critical need to move past unregulated open-access fishing in resource poor countries around the world. This empirical evidence demonstrates how both fishers and their supporting ecosystems can and do benefit from restrictions and improved management."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Wildlife Conservation Society
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WATER WORLD
Thailand closes dive spots due to reef damage
Bangkok (AFP) Jan 21, 2011
Thailand has closed a host of popular dive sites to tourists indefinitely to allow coral reefs to recover from widespread bleaching caused by warmer sea temperatures, authorities said Friday. In total 18 areas in seven marine parks are off-limits, according to an order by the Thai National Park, Wildlife and Plant Conservation Department. "Diving in all the spots is to be halted indefini ... read more







WATER WORLD
Haiti candidates press for more quake aid

Australia floods to cut growth: bank

Australia flags taxpayer levy for floods

Lucky crash escape for Honduran ministers

WATER WORLD
Apple unveils digital media subscription service

Kaspersky tips Android to dominate mobile

LED Products Billed As Eco-Friendly Contain Toxic Metals, Study Finds

How Much Information Is There In The World?

WATER WORLD
Kenya's Fisheries Management Promotes Species That Grow Larger And Live Longer

23 fishermen missing in Russia: report

Thailand closes dive spots due to reef damage

China earmarks $303 bn for safe water: report

WATER WORLD
Polar Bear Births Could Plummet With Climate Change

Volcanic vents found in Antarctic waters

VIMS Team Glides Into Polar Research

Researchers Map Out Ice Sheets Shrinking During Ice Age

WATER WORLD
Rights group opposes China bear-bile listing

China says drought won't affect world food prices

Walker's World: The new Egypt needs food

Floods disrupt Sri Lanka's rice production

WATER WORLD
Cyclone Bingiza kills five in Madagascar

Cyclone Bingiza hits Madagascar

Sri Lanka flood damage $600 mln

Powerful quake rocks Chile year after disaster

WATER WORLD
Somalia: Jihadists, regime eye big pushes

South Sudan: Born under a bad sign?

Tunisian army patrols ports to stop migrant exodus

China FM urges West to lift sanctions on Zimbabwe

WATER WORLD
Revisited Human-Worm Relationships Shed Light On Brain Evolution

On Their Own Two Feet

Ancient Teeth Raise New Questions About The Origins Of Modern Man

Mathematical Model Explains How Complex Societies Emerge And Collapse


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement