Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries

In the marine realm, there has been considerable habitat degradation caused by multiple human disturbances that often act synergistically, strongly affecting fish and invertebrate populations and, consequently, one of the major stakeholders of these resources, fishers. However, the mechanisms underl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Carrasquilla, Mauricio
Other Authors: Juanes, Francis
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9328
id ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-9328
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-93282018-05-02T20:11:43Z Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries Carrasquilla, Mauricio Juanes, Francis Fish habitat Mangrove habitats small-scale fisheries Nearshore Coastal Ecosystems Rockfish In the marine realm, there has been considerable habitat degradation caused by multiple human disturbances that often act synergistically, strongly affecting fish and invertebrate populations and, consequently, one of the major stakeholders of these resources, fishers. However, the mechanisms underlying how marine habitats support fisheries remain understudied. In this dissertation I examined the importance of fish habitat at global, regional and local scales in two distinct systems (mangrove habitats in the tropics and rockfish habitats in inshore waters of Vancouver Island) combining a suite of different approaches. First, I explored the mangrove-fishery linkage relationship by conducting a global meta-analysis. I found strong evidence supporting the importance of mangrove area to enhance fisheries. This relationship, however, varied across countries, likely based on regional geomorphological settings and fishery management policies. Subsequently, I determined the use of mangrove and adjacent habitats by fish in a tropical lagoon system in the continental Caribbean (Colombia), systems often overlooked in the Caribbean when analyzing mangroves as fish habitat. I collected fish with gillnets at different distances from mangroves and at different sites within the same lagoon system. While fish used mangroves, fish abundance was not higher in these habitats compared to adjacent ones, as predicted. However, diversity tended to be higher in mangroves. Nevertheless, the major driver affecting abundance, diversity and biomass was salinity. That is, diversity and abundance decreased as salinity increased. Next, I used a Local Ecological Knowledge approach to explore the mangrove-fishery linkage relationship because fishers are seldom incorporated into such relationships. By conducting semi-structured interviews I found that fishers fish close to their village and to mangroves, that in addition to fishing they use mangroves for firewood and as construction material. Fishers also agreed that mangroves are important for their fishing activity, as these habitats are critical for fish and crustaceans caught in the system. Finally, I examined the importance of derived benthic parameters for rockfish abundance and distribution at large spatial scales (100s km) in inshore waters of Vancouver Island. I established that higher complexity better explains presence and higher abundance of rockfish. Furthermore, the results provided valuable information for fishery and spatial management and habitat conservation to help recover rockfish populations. All together, these findings highlight the urgency to preserve coastal marine habitats for both juvenile and adult marine organisms to sustain small-scale fisheries as a food source and for traditional purposes. While conserving habitats is a key component of a broader and more complex ecosystem approach that includes overfishing and other anthropogenic pressures, in the absence of a holistic approach the chances of success are minimal. Graduate 2019-04-18 2018-05-01T18:52:19Z 2018 2018-05-01 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9328 Carrasquilla-Henao, M., and Juanes, F. 2017. Mangroves enhance local fisheries catches: a global meta-analysis. Fish Fish. 18: 79-93. English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Fish habitat
Mangrove habitats
small-scale fisheries
Nearshore
Coastal Ecosystems
Rockfish
spellingShingle Fish habitat
Mangrove habitats
small-scale fisheries
Nearshore
Coastal Ecosystems
Rockfish
Carrasquilla, Mauricio
Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
description In the marine realm, there has been considerable habitat degradation caused by multiple human disturbances that often act synergistically, strongly affecting fish and invertebrate populations and, consequently, one of the major stakeholders of these resources, fishers. However, the mechanisms underlying how marine habitats support fisheries remain understudied. In this dissertation I examined the importance of fish habitat at global, regional and local scales in two distinct systems (mangrove habitats in the tropics and rockfish habitats in inshore waters of Vancouver Island) combining a suite of different approaches. First, I explored the mangrove-fishery linkage relationship by conducting a global meta-analysis. I found strong evidence supporting the importance of mangrove area to enhance fisheries. This relationship, however, varied across countries, likely based on regional geomorphological settings and fishery management policies. Subsequently, I determined the use of mangrove and adjacent habitats by fish in a tropical lagoon system in the continental Caribbean (Colombia), systems often overlooked in the Caribbean when analyzing mangroves as fish habitat. I collected fish with gillnets at different distances from mangroves and at different sites within the same lagoon system. While fish used mangroves, fish abundance was not higher in these habitats compared to adjacent ones, as predicted. However, diversity tended to be higher in mangroves. Nevertheless, the major driver affecting abundance, diversity and biomass was salinity. That is, diversity and abundance decreased as salinity increased. Next, I used a Local Ecological Knowledge approach to explore the mangrove-fishery linkage relationship because fishers are seldom incorporated into such relationships. By conducting semi-structured interviews I found that fishers fish close to their village and to mangroves, that in addition to fishing they use mangroves for firewood and as construction material. Fishers also agreed that mangroves are important for their fishing activity, as these habitats are critical for fish and crustaceans caught in the system. Finally, I examined the importance of derived benthic parameters for rockfish abundance and distribution at large spatial scales (100s km) in inshore waters of Vancouver Island. I established that higher complexity better explains presence and higher abundance of rockfish. Furthermore, the results provided valuable information for fishery and spatial management and habitat conservation to help recover rockfish populations. All together, these findings highlight the urgency to preserve coastal marine habitats for both juvenile and adult marine organisms to sustain small-scale fisheries as a food source and for traditional purposes. While conserving habitats is a key component of a broader and more complex ecosystem approach that includes overfishing and other anthropogenic pressures, in the absence of a holistic approach the chances of success are minimal. === Graduate === 2019-04-18
author2 Juanes, Francis
author_facet Juanes, Francis
Carrasquilla, Mauricio
author Carrasquilla, Mauricio
author_sort Carrasquilla, Mauricio
title Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
title_short Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
title_full Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
title_fullStr Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
title_full_unstemmed Ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
title_sort ecological importance of nearshore habitats to sustain small-scale fisheries
publishDate 2018
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9328
work_keys_str_mv AT carrasquillamauricio ecologicalimportanceofnearshorehabitatstosustainsmallscalefisheries
_version_ 1718634799558557696