Evaluating ecosystem impacts of gear regulations in a data-limited fishery—comparing approaches to estimate predator–prey interactions in Ecopath with Ecosim

Author:

Rehren Jennifer1ORCID,Coll Marta2,Jiddawi Narriman3,Kluger Lotta Clara45,Omar Omar6,Christensen Villy7,Pennino Maria Grazia8,Wolff Matthias9

Affiliation:

1. Marine Spatial Management, Thünen Institute of Sea Fisheries , 27572 Bremerhaven , Germany

2. Marine Renewal Resources, Institute of Marine Science (ICM-CSIC) and Ecopath International Initiative , 08003 Barcelon , Spain

3. Institute of Fisheries Research (MALNF) , Zanzibar , Tanzania

4. Center for Ocean and Society (CeOS), Kiel University , D-24118 Kiel , Germany

5. Department of Agricultural Economics, Kiel University , 24118 Kiel , Germany

6. Department of Fisheries and Sailing, Zanzibar National Services Technical School (JKU) , Zanzibar , Tanzania

7. Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada, and Ecopath International Initiative, Barcelona , Spain

8. Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO, CSIC), Centro Oceanográfico de Vigo , Vigo , Spain

9. Resource Management, Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) , 28359 Bremen , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Ecosystem models, such as Ecopath with Ecosim (EwE), are useful tools for developing ecosystem-based management strategies. Model development, however, requires data for the estimation of input parameters including time series for calibration. Most small-scale fisheries lack such information, making it difficult to reliably use ecosystem models for management strategy exploration. This is the case for the Chwaka Bay fishery (Zanzibar), where an increase in dragnets has led to concerns for unsustainable development. While EwE could help to explore the impacts of gear regulations in the bay, this is hampered by the lack of time series to estimate the predator–prey interactions (vulnerabilities) in the model. Here, we explore available approaches for estimating the vulnerabilities to simulate the effects of a dragnet prohibition with and without reallocation of fishing effort. Simulations suggest that banning dragnets would be beneficial for the fishing community judged by the increase in biomass of functional groups and fishers’ profits, but not if dragnet fishers were to continue fishing in the bay by reallocating to other gears, indicated by the reduced fish biomass and fishers’ profits. The overall trend (decreasing or increasing) in the changes of functional groups, ecosystem indicators, and profits were relatively consistent across vulnerability settings, illustrating that an unfitted EwE model can be used for qualitative management strategy exploration.

Funder

DFG

National Geographical Society Early Career

European Union

NSERC

Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence

Institute of Marine Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

Reference58 articles.

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