Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act

Three species of wolffish have been listed under Canada's Species at Risk Act with consequences for commercial fisheries. Because harvester based local ecological knowledge (LEK) and science knowledge differ in goals, spatial and temporal scale, and mode of generalization, the current system st...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer Dawe, David Schneider
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014-09-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art26/
id doaj-81736f0f11df42debb24dd1a20127eaa
record_format Article
spelling doaj-81736f0f11df42debb24dd1a20127eaa2020-11-24T22:56:51ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872014-09-011932610.5751/ES-06674-1903266674Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk ActJennifer Dawe0David Schneider1Memorial University of Newfoundland and LabradorMemorial University of Newfoundland and LabradorThree species of wolffish have been listed under Canada's Species at Risk Act with consequences for commercial fisheries. Because harvester based local ecological knowledge (LEK) and science knowledge differ in goals, spatial and temporal scale, and mode of generalization, the current system struggles with including LEK along with traditional assessments in species at risk (SARA) processes. The differences in LEK and science led us to consider the concept of consilience in the sense of strengthened inductive knowledge via convergence or concordance of evidence from disparate sources. We used three criteria when considering consilience: a general concurrence of data, presence of unexplained inconsistencies, and a degree of complementarity between two disparate sources. Using wolffish in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence we examined the feasibility of applying these criteria to two disparate sources of information: scientific stock assessments and data from structured fish harvester local ecological knowledge (LEK) interviews. We found that for wolffish there was consistency in observed trends and locations of high wolffish catch rates from both harvester LEK interviews and fishery-independent survey data. There was inconsistency between observed variability in catch sizes in harvester interviews and stock assessment maps. The science and LEK evidence were complementary in that observations took place at different spatial and temporal scales. They were complementary in that LEK was inshore, compared to science data from offshore. The explicit criteria we developed permit use of fishers' knowledge that, in the past, has often been discounted to zero, often thereby reducing trust by harvesters in the results of species at risk assessments. The concept of consilience shifts the focus from controversy to dialogue in the use of evidence and, so, is important in rebuilding marine fishing communities.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art26/bycatchfishery surveyslocal ecological knowledgespecies at riskwolffish
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Dawe
David Schneider
spellingShingle Jennifer Dawe
David Schneider
Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
Ecology and Society
bycatch
fishery surveys
local ecological knowledge
species at risk
wolffish
author_facet Jennifer Dawe
David Schneider
author_sort Jennifer Dawe
title Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
title_short Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
title_full Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
title_fullStr Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
title_full_unstemmed Consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (Anarhichadidae) listed under the Canadian Species at Risk Act
title_sort consilient knowledge in fisheries: a case study of three species of wolffish (anarhichadidae) listed under the canadian species at risk act
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Three species of wolffish have been listed under Canada's Species at Risk Act with consequences for commercial fisheries. Because harvester based local ecological knowledge (LEK) and science knowledge differ in goals, spatial and temporal scale, and mode of generalization, the current system struggles with including LEK along with traditional assessments in species at risk (SARA) processes. The differences in LEK and science led us to consider the concept of consilience in the sense of strengthened inductive knowledge via convergence or concordance of evidence from disparate sources. We used three criteria when considering consilience: a general concurrence of data, presence of unexplained inconsistencies, and a degree of complementarity between two disparate sources. Using wolffish in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence we examined the feasibility of applying these criteria to two disparate sources of information: scientific stock assessments and data from structured fish harvester local ecological knowledge (LEK) interviews. We found that for wolffish there was consistency in observed trends and locations of high wolffish catch rates from both harvester LEK interviews and fishery-independent survey data. There was inconsistency between observed variability in catch sizes in harvester interviews and stock assessment maps. The science and LEK evidence were complementary in that observations took place at different spatial and temporal scales. They were complementary in that LEK was inshore, compared to science data from offshore. The explicit criteria we developed permit use of fishers' knowledge that, in the past, has often been discounted to zero, often thereby reducing trust by harvesters in the results of species at risk assessments. The concept of consilience shifts the focus from controversy to dialogue in the use of evidence and, so, is important in rebuilding marine fishing communities.
topic bycatch
fishery surveys
local ecological knowledge
species at risk
wolffish
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol19/iss3/art26/
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniferdawe consilientknowledgeinfisheriesacasestudyofthreespeciesofwolffishanarhichadidaelistedunderthecanadianspeciesatriskact
AT davidschneider consilientknowledgeinfisheriesacasestudyofthreespeciesofwolffishanarhichadidaelistedunderthecanadianspeciesatriskact
_version_ 1716389811505332224