Mathew, Sebastian (2011) Fishery-dependent information and the ecosystem approach: What role can fishers and their knowledge play in developing countries? ICES Journal of Marine Science, Vol.68 (8). pp. 1805-1808.
Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)Abstract
An ecosystem approach to fishery management is as much a mechanism to deal with the impact of fishing on targeted, associated, and dependent fish stocks, and on the habitat, as it is to deal with the impact of habitat degradation from natural and anthropogenic factors on fishing. In developing countries, often with little institutional capacity for generating timely and reliable information for managing fisheries, effective integration of the knowledge possessed by fishers and their communities regarding, for example, oceanographic, biological, economic, social, and cultural aspects can contribute to an ecosystem approach to fisheries. The challenge is to identify and validate such knowledge and to create policy and legal space to integrate it into management, also drawing upon good practice in industrialized countries. An attempt is made to identify such knowledge, to discuss its salient aspects, and to look at the conditions under which its practical value can be enhanced and integrated into formal fishery-management systems in developing countries.
Item Type: | Articles |
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Keywords: | ICES, ICSF, Conservation, Ecosystem Approach, Traditional Knowledge, Fishermen, Developing Countries, TEK, Capacity Building, Fisheries Management, Fisheries Information |
Subjects: | Right to Resources |
Depositing User: | Jeeva ICSF Rajan |
Date Deposited: | 21 Mar 2022 10:04 |
Last Modified: | 21 Mar 2022 10:04 |
URI: | http://icsfarchives.net/id/eprint/10935 |
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