Abstract

Landing data are the most basic information used to manage fisheries, although they are often unavailable or incomplete. The objective of this work was to reconstruct the national database of marine commercial landings for the Brazilian industrial and artisanal fisheries, from 1950 to 2015. Total landings increased strongly from 1950 to mid-1980s and suffered sharp decline in the early 1990s, mainly associated to the collapse of sardine fisheries. After that, another period of increasing landings was observed, but at a much lower rate. Industrial landings always surpassed artisanal landings in Brazilian waters, except for the beginning of the time series, when many industrial fleets had not started yet, and in the early 2000s, when a change in the methodology for collecting landing statistics was implemented in the state of Pará leading to an overestimation of artisanal landings. Artisanal fisheries have been declining since 2005, which is worrisome due to the social impact it may have on local income and food security. Regional differences were also observed, with industrial landings being always higher than artisanal landings in southeastern-southern Brazil, while the opposite was true for the northern-northeastern regions. Higher landings were observed in the southeastern-southern regions when both artisanal and industrial fleets were combined. Sardine and demersal fishes were the main resources landed by industrial fishers. Artisanal fishers caught more species than their industrial counterpart, featuringXiphopenaeus kroyeri,Cynoscion acoupa, andUcides cordatus. Although the fishing ofEpinephelus itajarawas banned in Brazil, it continues to be landed. Yet, catches of this species and others under some threat status are still not properly registered, including:Carcharhinus longimanus,Galeorhinus galeus,Sphyrna lewini,Sphyrna mokarran,Pristis pectinata, andPseudobatos horkelii. Fishing resources not identified in previous landing reconstruction efforts, such as sea urchins and sea cucumbers, have now been reported. The database presented here should be continuously updated and improved. It is of paramount importance to resume the collection of landing statistics, including information on fishing effort, to assess the relative impact of fisheries and environmental factors on the main Brazilian fishing stocks.

Highlights

  • An analysis of the status of several fishery stocks exploited around the globe for which data are available has indicated that about 34.2% of the stocks are overexploited and another 59.6% fully exploited (FAO, 2020)

  • Most of the national decreasing trend during this period was due to the industrial fleet

  • Artisanal landings have been decreasing about 6,800 tonnes·year−1 since 2005 (F = 92.4; p < 0.0001; r2 = 0.91)

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Summary

Introduction

An analysis of the status of several fishery stocks exploited around the globe for which data are available has indicated that about 34.2% of the stocks are overexploited and another 59.6% fully exploited (FAO, 2020). Numerous initiatives have been running in different countries to recover past landing information and generate more comprehensive catch statistics. Their results were compiled in an atlas aiming at portraying global marine catches, which provided fishing data per sector (artisanal, industrial, recreational, and subsistence), a work done by the Sea Around Us (Pauly and Zeller, 2016). Similar initiatives have been pursued toward portraying recreational fisheries, with global catches estimated at 0.9 million tonnes (Freire et al, 2020). This figure, small when compared to commercial fisheries, has high economic value (Cisneros-Montemayor and Sumaila, 2010)

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