Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines

The Fishing Industry in the Philippines plays an important role in the food and employment need of Filipino fishers. By using anchored Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs or payao), the Philippine tuna fisheries was transformed into a million-dollar industry. Minimal studies on exploitation rates and fis...

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Main Authors: Edison D. Macusi, Neil Angelo S. Abreo, Ricardo P. Babaran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
LEK
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00188/full
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spelling doaj-b6881895a24648478c2f2e8d2aa13ece2020-11-24T20:45:48ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452017-06-01410.3389/fmars.2017.00188236488Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern PhilippinesEdison D. Macusi0Edison D. Macusi1Neil Angelo S. Abreo2Ricardo P. Babaran3Aquaculture and Fisheries Group, Wageningen Institute of Animal Science, Wageningen University and ResearchWageningen, NetherlandsRegional Integrated Coastal Resources Management Center, Davao Oriental State College of Science and TechnologyMati City, PhilippinesRegional Integrated Coastal Resources Management Center, Davao Oriental State College of Science and TechnologyMati City, PhilippinesCollege of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of the Philippines VisayasIlo-ilo, PhilippinesThe Fishing Industry in the Philippines plays an important role in the food and employment need of Filipino fishers. By using anchored Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs or payao), the Philippine tuna fisheries was transformed into a million-dollar industry. Minimal studies on exploitation rates and fish behavior around anchored FADs hampered further understanding of this fishery practice. Studies on fish behavior using Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) are good complement where data is limited. A study using semi-structured interview (n = 46) and three focus group discussions (n = 39 participants) to record fishers' knowledge and observations on the behavior of different fish species around anchored FADs was conducted. This particularly focused on attraction, retention, and departure behavior of fishes in identified FAD sites. Based on the fishers' knowledge, tuna schools are attracted to anchored FADs at 10 km distance. In anchored FADs, tuna form schools segregated by species and size. There was no relationship between the attraction distance and the reported school size and the various waiting times for fish to aggregate below the FADs. There was no variation between the species present at day or night time although fishers have reported a distinction of species found near the surface (0–10 m) and those found at other depths (11–20 m). Juvenile yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), skipjack (Katsuwonus pelamis), and frigate and bullet tunas (Auxis spp.) are found to stay at 25–50 m from the FAD at a depth of >20 m. Adult oceanic tunas reside in deeper waters (75 m). The fish visual census produced similar results with the semi-structured interviews and FGDs but did not observe oceanic tunas at depths of 15–20 m in the anchored FADs examined.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00188/fullFADsfish aggregating devicesLEKpayaoPhilippinestuna
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edison D. Macusi
Edison D. Macusi
Neil Angelo S. Abreo
Ricardo P. Babaran
spellingShingle Edison D. Macusi
Edison D. Macusi
Neil Angelo S. Abreo
Ricardo P. Babaran
Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
Frontiers in Marine Science
FADs
fish aggregating devices
LEK
payao
Philippines
tuna
author_facet Edison D. Macusi
Edison D. Macusi
Neil Angelo S. Abreo
Ricardo P. Babaran
author_sort Edison D. Macusi
title Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
title_short Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
title_full Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
title_fullStr Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) on Fish Behavior Around Anchored FADs: the Case of Tuna Purse Seine and Ringnet Fishers from Southern Philippines
title_sort local ecological knowledge (lek) on fish behavior around anchored fads: the case of tuna purse seine and ringnet fishers from southern philippines
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2017-06-01
description The Fishing Industry in the Philippines plays an important role in the food and employment need of Filipino fishers. By using anchored Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs or payao), the Philippine tuna fisheries was transformed into a million-dollar industry. Minimal studies on exploitation rates and fish behavior around anchored FADs hampered further understanding of this fishery practice. Studies on fish behavior using Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) are good complement where data is limited. A study using semi-structured interview (n = 46) and three focus group discussions (n = 39 participants) to record fishers' knowledge and observations on the behavior of different fish species around anchored FADs was conducted. This particularly focused on attraction, retention, and departure behavior of fishes in identified FAD sites. Based on the fishers' knowledge, tuna schools are attracted to anchored FADs at 10 km distance. In anchored FADs, tuna form schools segregated by species and size. There was no relationship between the attraction distance and the reported school size and the various waiting times for fish to aggregate below the FADs. There was no variation between the species present at day or night time although fishers have reported a distinction of species found near the surface (0–10 m) and those found at other depths (11–20 m). Juvenile yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares), skipjack (Katsuwonus pelamis), and frigate and bullet tunas (Auxis spp.) are found to stay at 25–50 m from the FAD at a depth of >20 m. Adult oceanic tunas reside in deeper waters (75 m). The fish visual census produced similar results with the semi-structured interviews and FGDs but did not observe oceanic tunas at depths of 15–20 m in the anchored FADs examined.
topic FADs
fish aggregating devices
LEK
payao
Philippines
tuna
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00188/full
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