Can the global marine aquarium trade (MAT) be a model for sustainable coral reef fisheries?

Author:

Watson Gordon J.1ORCID,Kohler Shanelle1ORCID,Collins Jacob-Joe1ORCID,Richir Jonathan2ORCID,Arduini Daniele3ORCID,Calabrese Claudio3ORCID,Schaefer Martin4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Marine Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK.

2. SciSca, Maillen, Belgium.

3. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Technologies, University of Salento, Lecce, Italy.

4. School of the Environment, Geography and Geosciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK.

Abstract

Globally, 6 million coral reef fishers provide ~25% of emergent countries’ catch, but species have low value. The marine aquarium trade (MAT) targets high-value biodiversity, but missing data amplify draconian governance and demand for international prohibition. To stimulate sustainability and reef conservation investment, we generate a fiscal baseline using the first global analysis of numbers, diversity, and biomass of MAT-traded organisms. Each year, ~55 million organisms worth US$2.15 billion at retail are traded comparable with major fisheries, e.g., tuna. A sustainable MAT also requires overexploitation assessments. We identify 25 species/genera with “Extremely High” risk ratios and place the Indonesian and Sulu-Celebes Seas in the highest exploitation category. Despite predicted hobbyist number increases, unabated reef degradation and low governance will transform the MAT into an aquaculture-dominated industry decoupled from communities (i.e., culture located in importing countries). A “MAT-positive” future requires evidence-based management/governance, consumer education, and sustainable practice incentivization but can address the biodiversity and social and economic inequality crises.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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