A socio‐psychological approach for understanding and managing bycatch in small‐scale fisheries

Author:

Booth Hollie12ORCID,Ichsan Muhammad34ORCID,Hermansyah Rizky Fajar56,Rohmah Lailia Nur56,Naira Kusuma Banda7,Adrianto Luky5,Milner‐Gulland Eleanor Jane1

Affiliation:

1. The Interdisciplinary Centre for Conservation Science (ICCS), Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. The Biodiversity Consultancy Cambridge UK

3. University of Sunshine Coast Queensland Sippy Downs Australia

4. Yayasan Impak Laut Biru Indonesia (Impact Blue Sea Foundation) Bogor Indonesia

5. Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Sciences Bogor Agricultural University Bogor Indonesia

6. Directorate‐General of Surveillance and Control of Marine and Fishery Resources Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries of Indonesia Central Jakarta Indonesia

7. Aceh Jaya Regency Marine Affairs and Fisheries Office Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries of Indonesia Central Jakarta Indonesia

Abstract

Abstract Fisheries bycatch is the greatest threat to migratory, long‐lived marine animals. Addressing bycatch ultimately requires changing fisher behaviour, yet social and behavioural sciences are rarely applied to bycatch mitigation, with an absence of theory‐informed behaviour change interventions. Moreover, mitigating bycatch is particularly challenging in small‐scale mixed‐species fisheries (SSFs), where perceptions of target and non‐target vary widely, and all catches have economic or subsistence value. Such fisheries are ubiquitous throughout the world's oceans, and bycatch mitigation in these contexts necessitates a people‐centred approach. We seek to address this gap, drawing on well‐established theories from behavioural and social sciences. We first typify bycatch as a spectrum rather than a clearly delineated component of catch, where the position of a species on this spectrum depends on fishers' beliefs regarding the outcomes of bycatch‐relevant behaviour. We then outline an approach to ‘diagnose’ fishers' underlying beliefs about bycatch, using the theory of planned behaviour (TPB): a widely applied and empirically tested theory for predicting and changing behaviour. Finally, we illustrate the approach using an empirical case study, exploring fishers' beliefs regarding bycatch‐relevant behaviour for three endangered elasmobranch species in a small‐scale gill net fishery in Indonesia. Our findings show how the TPB can help to understand fishers' underlying beliefs regarding bycatch, and facilitators/inhibitors of bycatch mitigation, to inform behaviour change interventions. We emphasize the need to understand the human dimensions of bycatch, especially in SSFs, where technical fixes alone will be insufficient to change behaviour. Rather, interdisciplinary approaches are needed to align fishers' needs with conservation objectives. Our bycatch spectrum and the TPB could be widely applied for disentangling drivers of bycatch in other SSFs and designing interventions which support more effective and socially just marine conservation. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

Save Our Seas Foundation

Society for Conservation Biology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference66 articles.

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