Abstract

AbstractThis article explains the integration of an ecosystem into a collaborative management plan to restore New England's depleted multispecies groundfish stocks and decimated coastal fishery. Applying lessons learned from Maine's successful fishery for lobsters Homarus americanus, the Downeast Groundfish Initiative (an eclectic group of fishermen, scientists, and concerned individuals) created a new groundfish management approach designed to nest seamlessly within existing federal and state management systems and be compatible with a total allowable catch (TAC) approach, though it does not require TAC as the primary management tool. The plan resolves fine‐scale issues affecting the fishery's biological productivity and addresses the economic, social, and cultural factors confronting fishing communities. The inadequacy of systemwide assessments in detecting local changes in marine ecosystems led to the creation of smaller, contiguous coastal shelf management units each of which encompasses the subpopulation of a key species such as Atlantic cod Gadus morhua. Each unit would have an inshore core layer encompassing the species' spawning grounds and nursery habitats while providing a limited, small‐scale fishery for local fishermen using selective, habitat‐friendly gear. A buffer layer outside the core area that brackets coastal shelf migration routes would also support a fishery using all legal gear types but with constraints, and an outer layer would provide a fishery operating under current federal regulations. The core and buffer areas would be collaboratively managed to enhance local stock recovery by local advisory councils of fishermen functioning under state administration and regional council oversight. The coastal shelf plan synchronizes the needs of coastal ecosystems and fishermen by restoring species diversity and protecting critical habitats while rebuilding commercial stocks. The approach can create robust, sustainable fisheries for all user groups, resolve equity issues among fishermen, and revitalize the economies of fishing communities of all sizes.

Highlights

  • Abstract.—This article explains the integration of an ecosystem into a collaborative management plan to restore New England’s depleted multispecies groundfish stocks and decimated coastal fishery

  • The inadequacy of systemwide assessments in detecting local changes in marine ecosystems led to the creation of smaller, contiguous coastal shelf management units each of which encompasses the subpopulation of a key species such as Atlantic cod Gadus morhua

  • A corrective approach urged by Hilborn (2007) and others requires managers to ‘‘learn from successful fisheries that have been made sustainable.’’ In accordance with that theme, the strategies that made one Gulf of Maine (GOM) fishery sustainable have been used to develop an alternative management approach for another that has been repeatedly depleted: New England’s multispecies groundfish fishery

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Summary

TED AMES

Penobscot East Resource Center, Post Office Box 27, 43 School Street, Stonington, Maine 04681, USA. Abstract.—This article explains the integration of an ecosystem into a collaborative management plan to restore New England’s depleted multispecies groundfish stocks and decimated coastal fishery. The coastal shelf plan synchronizes the needs of coastal ecosystems and fishermen by restoring species diversity and protecting critical habitats while rebuilding commercial stocks. A major challenge facing fisheries managers has been how to establish an integrated management approach that simultaneously deals with both the ecological needs of depleted fish stocks and the economic needs of diverse stakeholders. The MCSRP incorporates many of the concepts developed for the Maine lobster Homarus americanus zones to address management problems that are similar to those in the multispecies fishery. While the MCSRP deals with the GOM, it offers a functional approach that could resolve similar management problems in coastal shelf ecosystems throughout the country. A brief review of the problems addressed by the MCSRP is followed by a case study of the Maine lobster zone, a discussion as to how those concepts can be adapted to a multispecies fishery, and a description of the MCSRP proposal

Fisheries Management in New England
Current Status of the Fishery
Depletion Costs
Management Response
Summarizing the Problem
Constraints on Recovery
Institutional Arrangements
Reasons for Success
Control technology
The Multispecies Coastal Shelf Recovery Plan
The Pilot Project
Selection of the Pilot Area
Management Layers
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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