2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejar.2017.09.002
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Growth, mortality and exploitation rate of Plectropomus maculatus and P. oligocanthus (Groupers, Serranidae) on Cenderawasih Bay National Park, Indonesia

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…In both North and South Raja Ampat MPAs, fish biomass increased within sustainable use zones, suggesting that these MPAs are balancing sustainable fishing with biodiversity conservation. Fish biomass trends are not representative of all BHS MPAs, as MPAs with established monitoring programs have greater management capacity, although our results broadly reflect other recent BHS reef fish studies (e.g., Mudjirahayu, Rembet, Ananta, Runtuboi, & Sala, 2017;Brown et al, 2018;Sadovy de Mitcheson, Suharti, & Colin, 2019;Text S3). Global studies have indicated that healthy coral reefs without fishing typically sustain 1,000 kg/ha of fish biomass (Karr et al, 2015;MacNeil et al, 2015;McClanahan et al, 2019), so it is encouraging that North Raja Ampat sustainable fishing areas maintain fish biomass above this level.…”
Section: Critical Habitat Protection and Ecosystem Healthcontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…In both North and South Raja Ampat MPAs, fish biomass increased within sustainable use zones, suggesting that these MPAs are balancing sustainable fishing with biodiversity conservation. Fish biomass trends are not representative of all BHS MPAs, as MPAs with established monitoring programs have greater management capacity, although our results broadly reflect other recent BHS reef fish studies (e.g., Mudjirahayu, Rembet, Ananta, Runtuboi, & Sala, 2017;Brown et al, 2018;Sadovy de Mitcheson, Suharti, & Colin, 2019;Text S3). Global studies have indicated that healthy coral reefs without fishing typically sustain 1,000 kg/ha of fish biomass (Karr et al, 2015;MacNeil et al, 2015;McClanahan et al, 2019), so it is encouraging that North Raja Ampat sustainable fishing areas maintain fish biomass above this level.…”
Section: Critical Habitat Protection and Ecosystem Healthcontrasting
confidence: 49%
“…Key population dynamics parameters include growth, mortality, exploitation rate, and recruitment (Kirubasankar et al 2013;Mehanna et al 2013;Sabrah et al 2015;Ramachandran and Ramalingam 2020). Data on grouper population dynamics in Indonesia are still limited, although studies have been carried out in Taka Bonerate National Park Waters (Fatma et al 2021), Spermonde Archipelago in South Sulawesi (Ernaningsih et al 2014;Ernaningsih et al 2019), Cendrawasih Bay National Park Waters in Papua (Bawole et al 2017;Mudjirahayu et al 2017;Bawole et al 2018), Saleh Bay in West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara (Halim et al 2020;Efendi et al 2022), Wangi-wangi Island in Southeast Sulawesi (Patanda et al 2017), and in Bangka Regency (Adibrata et al 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The excessive catch of individuals that have not yet reached maturity and spawned tends to lead to the depletion of fish stocks [46]; conversely, the higher the proportion of mature individuals caught, the higher the likelihood that the fish stock can be maintained and support a sustainable fishery [4]. One fisheries management tool to reduce juvenile catch and conserve fish stocks is to adopt a minimum legal size (MLS) approach, in particular with respect to grouper fisheries [19,47].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One measure that can be applied to address the tendency of fishermen to catch small groupers, thereby preventing them from reaching maturity and reproducing, is to regulate the minimum legal size (MLS) that fishermen are allowed to catch [9,[16][17][18]. Minimum legal size policies for groupers are especially important when there are signs of recruitment overfishing and/or growth overfishing [18][19][20][21], such as those observed in Kwandang Bay.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%