Title: Ecosystem impacts of fishing and Ecosystem Based Management
1Ecosystem impacts of fishing and Ecosystem Based
Management
2Views of Ecosystems
3Trophic
4Ecosystem structure
- Refuge from predators
- Access to food
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6The California Current Ecosystem
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14San Miguel Island Fur Seal
U.S. PACIFIC MARINE MAMMAL STOCK ASSESSMENTS
2005Carretta et al. NOAA Technical Memo
NOAA-TM-NMFS-SWFSC-388
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17Maximum biomass of key commercial species in the
ecosystem
18None of these stocks are overfished no lost
yield
- These stocks constitute 97 of the biomass!
- All of the overfished stocks are low abundance
stocks, they constitute 1.3 of the unfished
stock biomass - Widow classified as overfished but at 31 of
unfished biomass
19Maximum biomass of less abundant species
20The overfished stocks
21Revenue (constant )from Little et al
22History of catch
From Little et al
23Ecosystem goods and services what we value
- Food
- Commercial value in harvest
- Recreational harvest
- Recreational non-consumptive use
- Existence value
- Non food products, pharmaceuticals
- Water quality climate
24A score-cardhow are we doing
- Yield for food, communities and jobs
- Profitability
- Abundance in recreational areas
- Abundance of charismatic species
- Lack of extinction
25What does fishing do?
- Reduces abundance of target species
- Reduce abundance of non-target species due to
by-catch - Increased abundance of some non-target species
- Modify habitat due to physical action
- Change trophic levels
- Encourage invasive species
26Bottom Trawling
27http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzikSzUhUGtA
28Photos Keith Sainsbury
29What is known
- Bottom contact gear has large impact on benthic
structure - It does not appear to modify sand-mud bottom as
much, or even at all
30Heike Lotze meta analysis
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34Key points to note
- These systems are dramatically transformed
- Some elements of the ecosystem are more impacted
than others - The fishes are generally in the range of BMSY
(surprisingly)
35Ecosystem based management
An ecosystem approach to management (EAM) is one
that provides a comprehensive framework for
living resource decision making. In contrast to
individual species or single issue management,
EAM considers a wider range of relevant
ecological, environmental, and human factors
bearing on societal choices regarding resource
use.From NOAA
36EAM is differentiated from more narrowly focused
management approaches by a number of defining
characteristics. EAM is (1) geographically
specified, (2) adaptive in its development over
time as new information becomes available or as
circumstances change, (3) takes into account
ecosystem knowledge and uncertainties, (4)
recognizes that multiple simultaneous factors may
influence the outcomes of management
(particularly those external to the ecosystem),
and (5) strives to balance diverse societal
objectives that result from resource decision
making and allocation. Additionally, because of
its complexity and emphasis on stakeholder
involvement, the process of implementing EAM
needs to be (6) incremental and (7) collaborative
(Sissenwine and Murawski 2004).
37Elements of EBMfrom the Convention on Biological
Diversity
- The objectives of management of land, water and
living resources are a matter of societal
choices, - Management should be decentralized to the lowest
appropriate level, - Ecosystem managers should consider the effects
(actual or potential) of their activities on
adjacent and other ecosystems, - Conservation of ecosystem structure and
functioning, in order to maintain ecosystem
services, should be a priority target of the
ecosystem approach, - Ecosystem must be managed within the limits of
their functioning, - The ecosystem approach should be undertaken at
the appropriate spatial and temporal scales,
38More elements
- Recognizing the varying temporal scales and
lag-effects that characterize ecosystem
processes, objectives for ecosystem management
should be set for the long term, - Management must recognize the change is
inevitable, - The ecosystem approach should seek the
appropriate balance between, and integration of,
conservation and use of biological diversity, - The ecosystem approach should consider all forms
of relevant information, including scientific and
indigenous and local knowledge, innovations and
practices, - The ecosystem approach should involve all
relevant sectors of society and scientific
disciplines.
39Some hard questions
- What do we do about trophic tradeoffs
40Walters vision of alternative tradeoffs based on
his experience with ecosystem analysis
The concave tradeoff hypothesis (better
support by data, models)
The convex tradeoff hypothesis (belief,
pretense, hope, wishful thinking)
Compromise sacrifices much of both values
Non-consumptive Value
Fishery Value
41Walters analysis of cod-shrimp tradeoff
42Competing demands
- Commercial fishing including trawling
- Recreational fishing
- Non-consumptive use (diving, whale watching)
- Aquaculture
43The proposed solution
- Ocean zoning
- Is currently used (aquaculture leases) and will
certainly grow - Marine protected areas
- Recreational reserves
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46How is EBM applied in actual fisheries
- By-catch reduction
- Closure of sensitive areas
- Explicit consideration of trophic connection
- Move to single species reference points with
lower exploitation rates