Abstract
AbstractWhile human impacts like fishing have altered marine food web composition and body size, the status of the world’s important tropical inland fisheries remains largely unknown. Here, we look for signatures of human impacts on the indiscriminately fished Tonle Sap fish community that supports one of the world’s largest freshwater fisheries. By analyzing a 15-year time-series (2000–2015) of fish catches for 116 species obtained from an industrial-scale ‘Dai’ fishery, we find: (i) 78% of the species exhibited decreasing catches through time; (ii) downward trends in catches occurred primarily in medium to large-bodied species that tend to occupy high trophic levels; (iii) a relatively stable or increasing trend in catches of small-sized species, and; (iv) a decrease in the individual fish weights and lengths for several common species. Because total biomass of the catch has remained remarkably resilient over the last 15 years, the increase in catch of smaller species has compensated for declines in larger species. Our finding of sustained production but altered community composition is consistent with predictions from recent indiscriminate theory, and gives a warning signal to fisheries managers and conservationists that the species-rich Tonle Sap is being affected by heavy indiscriminate fishing pressure.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference66 articles.
1. Welcomme, R. L. et al. Inland capture fisheries. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365, 2881–96 (2010).
2. Tockner, K. & Stanford, J. A. Riverine flood plains: present state and future trends. Environmental Conservation 29, 308–330 (2002).
3. de Graaf, G., Bartley, D., Jorgensen, J. & Marmulla, G. The scale of inland fisheries, can we do better? Alternative approaches for assessment. Fisheries Management and Ecology 22, 64–70 (2015).
4. Lynch, A. J. et al. The social, economic, and environmental importance of inland fish and fisheries. Environmental Reviews 24, 1–7 (2016).
5. Cook, S. J. et al. From ideas to action: Ten steps to responsible inland fisheries that support livelihoods, food security, and healthy aquatic ecosystems. In Freshwater, Fish and the Future Proceedings of the Global Cross-Sectoral Conference (eds Taylor, W. W., Bartley, D. M., Goddard, C. I., Leonard, N. J. & Welcomme, R.) 343–351 (Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations and Michigan State University and American Fisheries Society, 2016).
Cited by
93 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献