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Small-scale fisheries present challenges to management due to fishers' dependency on resources and the adaptability of management systems. We compared social-ecological processes in the sea cucumber fisheries of Zanzibar and Mayotte, Western Indian Ocean, to better understand the reasons for resource conservation or collapse. Commercial value of wild stocks was at least 30 times higher in Mayotte than in Zanzibar owing to lower fishing pressure. Zanzibar fishers were financially reliant on the fishery and increased fishing effort as stocks declined. This behavioral response occurred without adaptive management and reinforced an unsustainable fishery. In contrast, resource managers in Mayotte adapted to changing fishing effort and stock abundance by implementing a precautionary fishery closure before crossing critical thresholds. Fishery closure may be a necessary measure in small-scale fisheries to preserve vulnerable resources until reliable management systems are devised. Our comparison highlighted four poignant lessons for managing small-scale fisheries: (1) diagnose the fishery regularly, (2) enable an adaptive management system, (3) constrain exploitation within ecological limits, and (4) share management responsibility.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13280-014-0552-5 | DOI Listing |
Animals (Basel)
August 2025
Key Laboratory of Freshwater Fish Reproduction and Development (Ministry of Education), Key Laboratory of Aquatic Science of Chongqing, School of Life Sciences, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China.
(1) Background: Affected by multiple factors, the decline in fish species diversity in some aquatic ecosystems has become increasingly pronounced. At a broad spatial scale, economic development has been widely recognized as one of the key factors influencing the fish distribution pattern. However, at a small scale, within a single river basin, the effects of economic development on the freshwater fish distribution and communities remain largely uninvestigated.
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August 2025
Department of Fishing Technology, Fisheries Faculty, Mugla University, Mugla, Turkey.
This study aimed to determine the stock assessment and growth parameters of in the southern Aegean Sea. The length frequency distribution of the specimens varied between 11.1 and 38.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Biol
August 2025
Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Conservationists and fisheries managers have historically focused somewhat narrowly on achieving environmental goals at the expense of environmental justice. We examined the links between the two in the context of coastal fisheries management in Fiji, a nation highly dependent on marine resources and with significant external conservation investment. We focused on procedural justice, an underexamined dimension of environmental justice, which is concerned with how decisions are made and by whom.
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August 2025
Department of Water Resources Engineering, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, 10330, Thailand.
This study investigates the impact of small-scale coastal development on beach material changes along the Ban Khlong Wan (BKW) coastline in the Mid-Gulf of Thailand, a site of legal disputes between local communities and government agencies over environmental impacts. We applied shoreline change analysis, high-resolution LiDAR observations, beach material characterization, and land use change assessment to understand the causes of beach transformation. Contrary to prior reports attributing the transition from sandy to muddy conditions to coastal protection structures, our findings reveal the coastline remained predominantly sandy until 2002, with shoreline shifts averaging less than ± 1 m/year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
August 2025
Swiss National Park Zernez Switzerland.
Prey species such as red deer () select their habitats according to their requirements for landscape features and adapt this selection to the presence of predators and humans. We tested how networks of different types of protected areas-the Swiss National Park (SNP) without hunting but with additional regulations for humans, and smaller-scale hunting ban areas (all types together = HBAs)-influenced diurnal and nocturnal habitat selection in red deer compared with unprotected areas.Using integrated step selection functions, we compared habitat selection of 243 GPS-collared individuals from six study areas across the Central Alps during day and night, during the year and specifically during the short autumnal hunting season.
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