2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198068
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Human and environmental gradients predict catch, effort, and species composition in a large Micronesian coral-reef fishery

Abstract: The consistent supply of fresh fish to commercial markets may mask growing fishing footprints and localized depletions, as fishing expands to deeper/further reefs, smaller fish, and more resilient species. To test this hypothesis, species-based records and fisher interviews were gathered over one year within a large, demand-driven coral-reef fishery in Chuuk, Micronesia. We first assessed catch statistics with respect to high windspeeds and moon phases that are known to constrain both catch and effort. While l… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
(78 reference statements)
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“…These species may have a comparatively strong density-dependent responses making them more resilient to fishing pressure. Previous studies have shown their consistent contributions to overall landings despite size-structure shifts (Taylor et al 2014b;Cuetos-Bueno et al 2018;Houk et al 2018b). Similarly, larger sizes of rudderfish, K. cinerascens, and goatfish, M. flavolineatus, found on the more populated island of Saipan compared to Rota and Tinian are consistent with a temporal study on Guam showing these species became more prolific with increasing fishing pressure over a 20 years period (Houk et al 2018b).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
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“…These species may have a comparatively strong density-dependent responses making them more resilient to fishing pressure. Previous studies have shown their consistent contributions to overall landings despite size-structure shifts (Taylor et al 2014b;Cuetos-Bueno et al 2018;Houk et al 2018b). Similarly, larger sizes of rudderfish, K. cinerascens, and goatfish, M. flavolineatus, found on the more populated island of Saipan compared to Rota and Tinian are consistent with a temporal study on Guam showing these species became more prolific with increasing fishing pressure over a 20 years period (Houk et al 2018b).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…The present results offered that variability can also arise from environmental cycles that dictate access to more remote locations. As a result, fisheries expansions can mask localized depletions that are not recorded in most historical landings datasets (Crona et al 2016;Cuetos-Bueno et al 2018). We conclude that examining even coarse monthly landing records through time with respect to environmental regimes can provide one indication of localized depletions that corresponded with size-and-age structure shifts and are desirable for further research.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…These criteria yielded seven data sets that have been summarized in the peer-reviewed or grey literature, mostly stemming from the Micronesian region and within the United States-affiliated islands and the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). These included long-term (>1 year) commercial fishery surveys from Guam (methods provided in [22]), Saipan (Commonwealth of the Mariana Islands) [11], Tutuila (American Samoa; methods provided in [22]), Pohnpei (FSM) [4,12], Chuuk (FSM) [14], and Kosrae (FSM) [15]. I accessed State of Hawaii fishery market surveys (which summarize commercial landings in the Main Hawaiian Islands) from the Hawaii Division of Aquatic Resources Commercial Marine Landings for the period 2010 to 2015.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of the most severe fisheries declines are in data-deficient artisanal fisheries (Pauly 1997;Allison and Ellis 2001;Neil et al 2007;Worm et al 2009;Johnson et al 2013), where communities lack the capacity to conduct research and monitor the status of their yields and where robust governance structures or formal monitoring programs are absent (Hughes et al 2010;Fenner 2012). This paradigm is universal in the artisanal fisheries of the tropical Pacific Ocean, where low fish biomass and altered reef ecosystems are associated with human inhabitation (Friedlander and DeMartini 2002;DeMartini et al 2008;Sandin et al 2008), and there is an urgent need to manage these fisheries on local and regional scales (Bell et al 2009;Houk et al 2012Houk et al , 2017Houk et al , 2018Cuetos-Bueno et al 2018).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%