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| | | Ecosystem Approaches to Management |
Maintained by NOAA
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| | Ecosystem approaches to fishery management | | | Management 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 | | | Impacts 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: |  | | Photo title: Marine debris at Sardinia, Italy | | Photo credit: Norbert Wu, Pew Collection | | | | |
 | | | |  | Panel passes restrictions on West Coast fishing to protect depleted species
by Colleen Valles, Associated Press 21 June 2002 | |
| (FOSTER CITY, Calif.) A panel that oversees the West Coast's fishing grounds approved severe restrictions Thursday intended to protect several depleted species of fish. The Pacific Fishery Management Council voted to prohibit groundfish fishing in medium depths north of Cape Mendocino, about 200 miles north of San Francisco. South of the cape, groundfish trawling will be prohibited except for doversole, thornyhead, and sable fish. Some fishers fear the proposed restrictions could endanger their livelihoods and force them to venture farther out to sea. But some said they were relieved that stiffer restrictions that had been considered were not approved. "Everybody wishes it could be better, but it's the more acceptable of the two choices," Rod Moore, executive director of the West Coast Seafood Processors Association, said after the vote. | |
Read more at http://enn.com/news/wire ... 47621.asp.
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| Tina Farmer
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| 1076 Topics - 5135 Related Knowledge - 2534 Members - 34 Editors |