Global synthesis of effects and feedbacks from artificial reefs on socioecological systems in recreational fisheries

Author:

Chong Lisa12ORCID,Siders Zachary A.1,Lorenzen Kai1,Ahrens Robert N. M.3,Camp Edward V.1

Affiliation:

1. Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Program, School of Forest, Fisheries, and Geomatic Sciences University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

2. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Quantitative Fisheries Center Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

3. Fisheries Research and Monitoring Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center Honolulu Hawaii USA

Abstract

AbstractArtificial reefs have been widely deployed with the intention of increasing fish habitat, enhancing recreational fishery opportunities and providing socio‐economic benefits to surrounding communities. Substantial work has been done to understand the ecology of artificial reefs but the efficacy of artificial reefs as a management tool hinges on socioecological feedbacks that are not well understood. Socioecological feedbacks are difficult to discern because they depend on multiple and complex interactions between fish, fishers, managers and habitats. To better understand the net effects of artificial reefs on recreational fisheries, we conducted a literature review to catalogue effects and feedbacks of artificial reefs. Our global synthesis revealed that artificial reefs may result in a net negative effect on fish populations, at least in the short‐term, as catch‐driven effects bolstering socio‐economic objectives occur more often or at greater intensities than positive biological effects. We have highlighted important effects of artificial reefs and feedbacks that need to be accounted for when considering their deployment in fishery management. There may be unintended consequences if biological benefits from habitat‐to‐fish and fish‐to‐fish feedbacks are outweighed by population losses due to greater socio‐economic benefits from fish‐to‐fisher feedbacks. Taken in concert with their semi‐permanent nature and apparent popularity with stakeholders, a view emerges of artificial reefs possibly functioning as a ‘social‐ecological trap’. This work emphasizes the need for robust assessments of the effects of artificial reefs, as well as more formal decision science approaches for implementing of these structures.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference191 articles.

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2. The Potential for Unreported Artificial Reefs to Serve as Refuges from Fishing Mortality for Reef Fishes

3. Saving large fish through harvest slots outperforms the classical minimum‐length limit when the aim is to achieve multiple harvest and catch‐related fisheries objectives

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