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Artisanal fish fences pose broad and unexpected threats to the tropical coastal seascape

Author

Listed:
  • Dan A. Exton

    (Operation Wallacea, Wallace House, Old Bolingbroke)

  • Gabby N. Ahmadia

    (Oceans Conservation, World Wildlife Fund)

  • Leanne C. Cullen-Unsworth

    (Cardiff University
    Project Seagrass)

  • Jamaluddin Jompa

    (Hasanuddin University)

  • Duncan May

    (Rientraid, Drumbeg Road)

  • Joel Rice

    (Rice Marine Analytics)

  • Paul W. Simonin

    (Cornell University)

  • Richard K. F. Unsworth

    (Project Seagrass
    Swansea University)

  • David J. Smith

    (University of Essex, Colchester)

Abstract

Gear restrictions are an important management tool in small-scale tropical fisheries, improving sustainability and building resilience to climate change. Yet to identify the management challenges and complete footprint of individual gears, a broader systems approach is required that integrates ecological, economic and social sciences. Here we apply this approach to artisanal fish fences, intensively used across three oceans, to identify a previously underrecognized gear requiring urgent management attention. A longitudinal case study shows increased effort matched with large declines in catch success and corresponding reef fish abundance. We find fish fences to disrupt vital ecological connectivity, exploit > 500 species with high juvenile removal, and directly damage seagrass ecosystems with cascading impacts on connected coral reefs and mangroves. As semi-permanent structures in otherwise open-access fisheries, they create social conflict by assuming unofficial and unregulated property rights, while their unique high-investment-low-effort nature removes traditional economic and social barriers to overfishing.

Suggested Citation

  • Dan A. Exton & Gabby N. Ahmadia & Leanne C. Cullen-Unsworth & Jamaluddin Jompa & Duncan May & Joel Rice & Paul W. Simonin & Richard K. F. Unsworth & David J. Smith, 2019. "Artisanal fish fences pose broad and unexpected threats to the tropical coastal seascape," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 10(1), pages 1-9, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:10:y:2019:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-019-10051-0
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10051-0
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