hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Seamount Fisheries: Do They Have a Future?

Show full item record

Type: Journal Article
Author: Pitcher, Tony J.; Clark, Malcom R.; Morato, Telmo; Watson, Reg
Journal: Oceanography
Volume: 23
Page(s): 134-144
Date: 2010
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/6633
Sector: Fisheries
Region:
Subject(s): fisheries
ecosystems
sustainability
Abstract: "Today, seamount fish populations are in trouble following a 30-year history of overexploitation, depletion, and collapse, with untold consequences for global biodiversity and the complex, delicate, but poorly understood, open-ocean food webs. Seamount fishes are especially vulnerable to fishing because their 'boom-and-bust' life history characteristics can be exploited by heavy, high-technology fisheries. We estimate present global seamount catches to be about 3 million tonnes per annum and increasing—vastly in excess of estimated sustainable levels. Unfortunately, most seamount fisheries are unmanaged. In a few developed countries, precautionary management regimes have recently been introduced, including protection from bottom trawling. Small-scale artisanal fisheries using less-harmful fishing gear, spatial closures, and low catch levels provide an attractive model for improved seamount fishery management that could foster the reconstruction of previously damaged seamount ecosystems. Such restored systems might one day support a substantial global sustainable fishery, although, like many other fisheries, the prognosis is poor."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
seamount fisheries.pdf 861.7Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record