Title: RISKS TO COASTAL FISHERIES IN SUBSAHARAN AFRICA
1RISKS TO COASTAL FISHERIES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
- K.A. Koranteng
- Marine Fisheries Research Division
- P.O. Box BT-62,
- Tema, GHANA
- kwamek_at_africaonline.com.gh
2INTRODUCTION
- The rich living marine resources of the seas
around Africa provide livelihood and employment
for thousands of fishers, foreign exchange for
governments and food security for the peoples in
and out of the region. - In Ghana, it is estimated that about 10 of the
population derive their livelihood from marine
fisheries alone.
3- The fishery resources of the region are both
locally important resident stocks and
transboundary straddling and migratory stocks - With the exception of the tuna fishing fleet, all
vessels operate in about the same area and target
similar species. This generates conflict among
the fleets, especially between the artisanal and
the trawler fleets.
4INTRODUCTION
- The productivity of coastal waters is dependent
on ocean processes like upwelling, the health of
mangrove forests, coral reefs, and seagrass beds
and the amount and quality of runoff from the
rivers. The western side of SSA includes some of
the important upwelling ecosystems in the world
5- On the eastern side of SSA the air temperature at
sea level rarely falls below 20C and seawater
temperature is usually between 20-30C. Ocean
currents are an important feature that strongly
influence the distribution of marine organisms
and the availability of nutrients.
6INTRODUCTION
- The wealth of estuaries, deltas, coastal lagoons,
and coral reefs also contribute significantly to
the diversity of fish life in the region. - Fishing in coastal lagoons, estuaries and creeks
is also an important economic activity.
7INTRODUCTION
- Fundamentally, the multiplicity of gears in the
artisanal fisheries and the sophistication of
certain industrial fisheries have lead to
conflicts between the sectors and
overexploitation of the fishery resources.
8INTRODUCTION
- In this presentation, the nature of coastal
fisheries in sub-Saharan Africa and the major
issues that affect them are discussed. - Key management interventions are proposed
including areas for regional collaboration in
research and management.
9OVERVIEW OF COASTAL FISHERIES IN SUB-SAHARAN
AFRICA
- The continental shelf in SSA varies considerably
from area to area but is generally narrow,
especially in the mid belt. - The Island States in the region are equally less
endowed with continental shelf area.
10- Thus, throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, coastal
fishing tends to be artisanal with up to 70
percent of fish landings attributed to artisanal
fishers in some countries. - The fisheries in the west African sub-region are
characterized by the dominance of small pelagic
species, that account for nearly 50 of total
catches. - Small pelagic species include sardinellas, bonga,
mackerels and anchovy.
11- There are also significant industrial (mainly
demersal fisheries) involving both national and
foreign fleets (mainly from EU, eastern Europe,
Korea and Japan). - The most important exploited species include
those of the families Sparidae, Sciaenidae,
Lutjanidae and Penaeidae. - These resources are also exploited by both
artisanal and industrial fisheries.
12- In the East Africa sub-Region the artisanal
fishery catch is dominated by relatively limited
number of specific groups, namely scavengers
(rabbitfish, barracudas), small pelagic species
crustacea (crabs and lobsters), and molluscs
(oysters and octopus).
13OVERVIEW OF COASTAL FISHERIES
Landings from Western Indian Ocean
14OVERVIEW OF COASTAL FISHERIES
- Landings from Eastern
Atlantic
15- Overexploitation of fishery resources was
identified by all eleven countries that
participated in the first phase of the African
Process, as being amongst the top five GIWA
issues in terms of their impacts on the coastal
zone and the livelihood of coastal communities. - Catch Per Unit Effort (CPUE) exceeds sustainable
yields in many countries while species diversity
and average body lengths of the most important
fish species have declined.
16- In the Gulf of Guinea, for example, the most
significant changes in the abundance of fish
species in the last three decades are - Fluctuations in abundance of sardinella species
- Dramatic increase and subsequent decline in
abundance of triggerfish (Balistes capriscus) - Recent discovery of large quantities of live
scallops (Chlamys purpuratus and Pecten jacobeus
) in coastal waters - Increase in abundance of tiger prawns (Penaeus
monodon) in coastal waters
17OVERVIEW OF COASTAL FISHERIES
- Changes in status and diversity of species in
sub-Saharan Africa have been attributed to both
natural and anthropogenic factors as well as
nearshore biophysical processes. - The story of overexploitation of coastal
resources is the same throughout SSA
18 STATUS OF TARGET SPECIES (GHANA _
WEST AFRICA)
19Mozambique, eastern Africa
- Shallow-water prawns Intensive
- Mundle prawns Intensive
- Deep-water prawns Moderate
- Deep-water Lobster Intensive
- Crayfish Moderate
- Deep-water crab Moderate
- Rock lobster Low
- Mangrove crab Low
20- Large Demersals moderate
- Large pelagics Very low
- Sharks Low
- Small demersals Low
- Small pelagics Low
- Deep-water fish Low
-
21MAJOR ISSUES THAT AFFECT COASTAL FISHERIES IN
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
- Fishery Related
- Overfishing
- Use of destructive fishing gears and practices
- Small and large-scale fisheries conflicts
- Post-harvest losses
22- The underlying cause of over-exploitation by
artisanal fishers, is poverty. - For industrial fisheries, overcapitalisation is
the primary cause of over-exploitation.
23MAJOR ISSUES..
- Infrastructure and capacity for management
- Inadequate information/research support for
management - Limited personnel (brain drain) and technical
capabilities - Limited resources/funding
- Lack of institutional coordination/collaboration
24- MAJOR ISSUES..
- Policy
- Inadequate policy and legal framework
- Insufficient/ineffective law enforcement
-
25MAJOR ISSUES..
- Nearshore forcing factors and productivity of
coastal waters - Siltation / sedimentation of coastal lagoons
- Coastal erosion and effect on landing sites of
artisanal fishers - Habitat degradation/destruction (coral reefs)
- Mangrove clearing for urbanisation and food
production - Damming of rivers and reduction of fiver
discharge -
26MAJOR ISSUES ..
- Pollution (Land-based sources and marine)
- Industrial pollution
- Agrochemical loading
- Domestic/sewage pollution
- Oil spills
-
27Pollution ..
- Pollution from oil and gas exploration is a
potential danger for coastal fisheries. E.G. In
Nigeria oil is produced from the Niger Delta
(over 90 oil fields, about 6,200 km of flowlines
and pipelines spread over 30,000 km2 of the
Delta).
28Pollution ..
- Pollution from land-based sources,
agrochemicals and the use of harmful fishing
methods have been identified as factors that
adversely affect coastal fisheries, especially in
lagoons, estuaries and on coral reefs.
29MAJOR ISSUES ..
- Physical alteration and modification of coastal
habitats including coastal erosion is a potential
source of danger for coastal fisheries. - Over-fishing in coral reef habitats causes reef
degradation and adversely affect productivity and
biodiversity.
30Mitigating Factors
- Important management interventions that would
address some of the risk factors are summarised
below
31Mitigating Factors..
- Limited entry and effort reduction
- Zoning of fishery waters
- Establishment of marine protected areas
- Restructuring of relevant policy and regulatory
frameworks - Redirection of systems of subsidies/support
- Enhancement of alternative livelihood and
occupational mobility
32Mitigating Factors..
- Spatial and temporal restrictions on certain
fishing gears - Technological control/limitations
- Enforcement of gear regulations
- Spatial restrictions (i.e. marine sanctuaries)
- Temporal restrictions (i.e. seasonal closures)
33- Institutional strengthening/upgrading
- Upgrading of technical personnel and facilities
- Improvement of financial capability and mandates
of organizations - Enhancement of research and information
- Establishment of appropriate fisheries management
reference points - Initiation of policy and institutional studies
34- Projects proposed in the GEF-MSP/ African
Process for sub-Saharan Africa -
- Assessment and Mitigation of the Ecological and
Socio-economic Impacts of Destructive Fishing
Practices - Mariculture Development (Plymouth university
experiment with Red snapper)
35GEF-MSP Fisheries Projects .
- Impact of Global Climate Change on Key Marine and
Coastal Ecosystems - Strengthening Management and Monitoring, Control
and Surveillance (MCS) Capacity of Fisheries
Management Organisations
36- Regional Cooperative Efforts for Joint
Management of Fisheries in Sub-Saharan Africa
37Regional Seas Conventions (UNEP)
- Abidjan Convention for Co-operation in the
Protection, Management and Development of the
Marine and Coastal Environment of the West and
Central African Region - - 23 Countries, 1981
38- Nairobi Convention for the Protection,
Management and Development of the Marine and
Coastal Environment of the Eastern African Region
- 4 Mainland Countries and 4 Island States, 1985
39- The Regional Seas Conventions bring the
countries together for the purpose of marine
environmental protection and management. - The work programmes of these two Conventions
include significant measures to combat coastal
environmental degradation and overexploitation of
fishery resources, especially in coastal waters.
40Large Marine Ecosystems (GEF/UNEP/UNDP/UNIDO/US-NO
AA)
- Canary Current LME project (under preparation)
- Guinea Current LME project (PDF-B phase after
pilot GOG-LME project) - Benguela Current LME project (under
implementation) - Western Indian Ocean LBA Project (Recently
approved for implementation)
41Fisheries-related activities in the LME projects
include
- Trawl survey and related data analyses and
database development - Strategic policy and management planning for
coastal fisheries
42- Regional strategies for resources rehabilitation
through comparative analyses - Training, workshops and networking activities in
stock assessment, community and fisheries policy
analyses and planning
43CONCLUSION
- Fisheries in SSA are both artisanal and
industrial - Local (costal countries) and distant water fleets
are involved in the fisheries
44- Risk factors include
- over-exploitation of resources,
- pollution,
- use of unapproved fishing methods
- Small and large-scale fisheries conflicts
- Post-harvest losses
45- Physical alteration and modification of coastal
habitats (including destruction of mangroves and
coral reefs) - Limited human, and institutional capacity for
resources management
46- The fishery resources are both localised and
widely-distributed. - Significant stake of International fishing fleets
implies problems are transboundary in nature,
hence international collaboration required for
management and mitigation.
47- Initiatives within the Regional Seas Conventions,
Large marine Ecosystems and African Process are a
step in the right direction - but more commitment for management required
from both national governments and donor community
48THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION