Abstract
Social and ecological systems come together during the act of fishing. However, we often lack a deep understanding of the fishing process, despite its importance for understanding and managing fisheries. A quantitative, mechanistic understanding of the opportunities fishers encounter, the constraints they face, and how they make decisions within the context of opportunities and constraints will enhance the design of fisheries management strategies to meet linked ecological and social objectives and will improve scientific capacity to predict impacts of different strategies. We examined the case of spearfishing in a Caribbean coral reef fishery. We mounted cameras on fishers’ spearguns to observe the fish they encountered, what limited their ability to catch fish, and how they made decisions about which fish to target. We observed spearfishers who dove with and without the assistance of compressed air, and compared the fishing process of each method using content analysis of videos and decision models of fishers’ targeting selections. Compressor divers encountered more fish, took less time to catch each fish, and had a higher rate of successful pursuits. We also analyzed differences among taxa in this multispecies fishery, because some taxa are known to be ecologically or economically more valuable than others. Parrotfish are ecologically indispensable for healthy coral reefs, and they were encountered and captured more frequently than any other taxon. Fishers made decisions about which fish to target based on a fish’s market value, proximity to the fisher, and taxon. The information uncovered on fishers’ opportunities, constraints, and decision making has implications for managing this fishery and others. Moreover, it demonstrates the value of pursuing an improved understanding of the fishing process from the perspective of the fishers.
Highlights
Fishing is an act in which society and ecosystems mix
Fishery management nearly always intervenes in the act of fishing in order to achieve ecological outcomes, social outcomes, or a mix of ecological and social outcomes
Researchers should seek a mechanistic understanding of the fishing process, the way fishers experience the resource, the factors that control their ability to catch fish, and how they make decisions while fishing
Summary
Fishing is an act in which society and ecosystems mix. Fishery management nearly always intervenes in the act of fishing in order to achieve ecological outcomes (e.g., maintaining the abundances of species with different functional roles in the ecosystem), social outcomes (e.g., providing livelihood stability for fishers), or a mix of ecological and social outcomes. The commonly used metric of catch per unit effort is the aggregate outcome of many interactions between a fisher and the fishery ecosystem [3]. These interactions and human decisions driving these interactions remain a black box for many fisheries. Decisions made at the level of the individual fisher aggregate to determine fleet dynamics, which in turn has important consequences for ecological and social outcomes [1, 4]
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