A quantitative comparison of recreational spearfishing and linefishing on the Great Barrier Reef: implications for management of multi-sector coral reef fisheries
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
This study compared the catch composition, catch per unit effort, and incidental impacts of spearfishers and linefishers engaged in a structured fishing program whereby fishing effort was standardized across time, space and skill level. It was found that (1) the catch composition of both groups of fishers overlapped considerably, (2) the numbers of target fish caught by spearfishers (156) and linefishers (168) were not significantly different, (3) the mean size of target fish caught by spearfishers (1.95 § 0.1 kg, §SE) was significantly larger than the mean size of target fish caught by linefishers (1.27 § 0.06 kg), and (4) spear-fishers retained 43% more biomass of target species than did linefishers (304 versus 213 kg, respectively). However, linefishers used »1 kg of bait for every 3 kg of target fish that were captured. Linefishers also caught far more undersized, undesirable, or protected fishes (i.e., bycatch) and caused far more pollution (i.e., lost gear) than did spearfishers. It is concluded that the overall impacts of recreational spearfishing and linefishing on fishery resources of the Great Barrier Reef are broadly equivalent (per unit of fishing effort), and that management regulations should be applied equitably across both fishing sectors. A management strategy of this type will simplify enforcement of fisheries regulations and avoid discrimination of particular fishers in local communities where both fishing methods are socially or culturally important.
Journal
Coral Reefs
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Volume
27
ISBN/ISSN
1432-0975
Edition
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Issue
1
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Publisher
Springer
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EISSN
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DOI
10.1007/s00338-007-0293-z