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Ecosystem Approaches to Management Maintained by NOAA  
        
Ecosystem approaches to fishery management
 
Habitat damage: the swath of a boat propeller is clearly visible in this Florida Keys seagrass bedManagement actions aimed at conserving the structure and function of marine ecosystems, in addition to conserving the fishery resource.

An ecosystem approach to fishery management aims to protect and rebuild ecosystems, including species and their habitats. It will add to, rather than replace, the approach of managing fish stocks one by one, or “single species” management.

Fisheries management will:
  • be adaptive,
  • be geographically specified,
  • take account of ecosystem knowledge and uncertainties,
  • consider multiple external influences, and
  • strive to balance diverse societal objectives.

The transition to an ecosystem approach to management needs to be incremental and collaborative. Although scientists have been studying ecosystem processes for decades, long term scientific research is still needed.

The precautionary approach and risk-averse policies have been advocated globally as essential to fisheries management. One approach is to demonstrate that fishing practices will not damage the stock, habitat or other ecosystem properties before allowing fishing to increase. This will assist the ecosystem approach to sustain and restore both fisheries and their ecosystems.

Based on Making “Ecosystems” part of NOAA’s shared vocabulary. November 2003.
Photo title: Habitat damage: the swath of a boat propeller is clearly visible in this Florida Keys seagrass bed
Photo credit: Harold Hudson, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
 
Impacts of fisheries on ecosystems
 
Shrimp trawl catchImpacts of fisheries on ecosystems are sometimes difficult to separate from environmental effects on ecosystems. Some of these possible fisheries effects include:
  • direct impacts of overfishing
  • modifying community species composition and genetic diversity through selective targeting on species and particular size classes
  • impacts on non-target species through low selectivity of certain gears
  • incidental mortality from lost or abandoned gear
  • direct impact on the sea bed through trawls and dredges
  • destructive illegal “fishing gear” such as dynamite and poisoning.

Marine protected areas can make an important contribution to integrated coastal zone management and ensure improved management of ecosystems.

Shrimp trawling results in bycatch and waste, up to 12 times bycatch for every 1 lb or kilo of shrimp.
Photo title: Shrimp trawl catch
Photo credit: Norbert Wu, Pew Collection
 
Other human impacts on ecosystems
 
Of course, there are human impacts on the marine ecosystem, other than fishing, described within the UN Atlas:
Marine debris at Sardinia, Italy
Photo title: Marine debris at Sardinia, Italy
Photo credit: Norbert Wu, Pew Collection
 
 
 
 
Deep Seas 2003 Conference
Date:01 December 2003 - 04 December 2003
Location:Queenstown, New Zealand
Organizer:Ministry of Fisheries, N.Z., AFFA., Australia, FAO, Rome
Information:In Dec. 2003 the Ministry of Fisheries, N.Z. and the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Australia (AFFA), with the technical assistance of FAO, are to hold a conference in Queenstown, New Zealand, to identify and discuss the issues relating to present and future needs of science and governance for the management of continental slope and deep-sea fisheries and the nature of the future institutions that will be required to manage them, to ensure these fisheries remain sustainable. It is very much our wish that organizations that share the Conference's objectives join us as co-sponsors and so contribute to the manner in which the conference unfolds. Sponsorship can take various forms, e.g. agreeing to send a speaker(s) for appropriate sessions, assisting to fund participants from countries who cannot afford to attend, or even (c), using the event to have an associated meeting, before or after the main conference, to address an associated topic The conference is also open to participants who are interested in the topic and wish either to attend only in a 'listening capacity' or to who wish to provide a paper at one of the breakout sessions.
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generationTime:2005/01/13 13:45:48