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Summary

Description

Traps are used extensively by artisanal fishers in the Caribbean for catching fishes and crustaceans in diverse habitats. An interdisciplinary study incorporating fisher knowledge and quantitative field surveys was employed to study current trap fishing practices in Puerto Rico in order to provide up to date information to managers and researchers. Here, we report on trap fishing methods today and fishers' perception of current trends and some problems affecting the resource of Puerto Rico. Forty-seven trap fishers representing 5 regions (North, South, East, West, and Islands) were interviewed on site about gear construction, effort, habitat preferences and fishers' perceptions of the main problems in the fishery and their possible solutions. Materials used in fish trap construction have been changing over time; however, the main routine for setting traps remains generally the same with some localized variations. Despite its traditional dominance, more than half of fishers have reduced their number of traps; therefore individual effort seems to be declining. Coral reefs were not reported as a preferred fish trap location, but rather areas adjacent to reefs (sand, seagrass,hard-bottom, and algal habitats) are targeted. The main problems reported by fishers in Puerto Rico are trap loss and habitat degradation, problems that correspond to increasing coastal development. Additionally, conflicts among users have promoted the use of unbuoyed traps,which in turn may lead to an increase in ghost fishing impacts. Ghost traps are known to continue fishing long afther they are lost and may be causing undetermined effects on fishing grounds. Suggestions to alleviate some problems include enforcement of environmental regulations and zoning schemes.

Document Information

Document Type
Report

Distribution Information

Contact Information

Distributor
Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute
305-289-2330
GCFI Home Page

Item Identification

Title: The user of fish traps in Puerto Rico: Current practice, long-term changes, and fishers' perceptions
Short Name: The user of fish traps in Puerto Rico: Current practice, long-term changes, and fishers' perceptions
Status: Completed
Abstract:

Traps are used extensively by artisanal fishers in the Caribbean for catching fishes and crustaceans in diverse habitats. An interdisciplinary study incorporating fisher knowledge and quantitative field surveys was employed to study current trap fishing practices in Puerto Rico in order to provide up to date information to managers and researchers. Here, we report on trap fishing methods today and fishers' perception of current trends and some problems affecting the resource of Puerto Rico. Forty-seven trap fishers representing 5 regions (North, South, East, West, and Islands) were interviewed on site about gear construction, effort, habitat preferences and fishers' perceptions of the main problems in the fishery and their possible solutions. Materials used in fish trap construction have been changing over time; however, the main routine for setting traps remains generally the same with some localized variations. Despite its traditional dominance, more than half of fishers have reduced their number of traps; therefore individual effort seems to be declining. Coral reefs were not reported as a preferred fish trap location, but rather areas adjacent to reefs (sand, seagrass,hard-bottom, and algal habitats) are targeted. The main problems reported by fishers in Puerto Rico are trap loss and habitat degradation, problems that correspond to increasing coastal development. Additionally, conflicts among users have promoted the use of unbuoyed traps,which in turn may lead to an increase in ghost fishing impacts. Ghost traps are known to continue fishing long afther they are lost and may be causing undetermined effects on fishing grounds. Suggestions to alleviate some problems include enforcement of environmental regulations and zoning schemes.

Other Citation Details:

FY2004 CRCP Project ID 1069; Project Title: Distribution of Trap Fishing and Effects on Habitats in Coral Reef Ecosystems; Principal Investigator: Ron Hill

Supplemental Information:

http://www.gcfi.org/proceedings/sites/default/files/procs/gcfi_55-62.pdf

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None artinsal fisheries
None fish traps

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None Puerto Rico

Document Information

Document Type: Report
Status Code: Published

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Author

CC ID: 295817
Date Effective From: 2014
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Hill, Ron
Address: 3500 Delwood Beach Road
Panama City,, FL 32408-7403
Email Address: ron.hill@noaa.gov
Phone: 850 234-6541 ext 203

Distributor

CC ID: 869746
Date Effective From: 2004
Date Effective To:
Contact (Organization): Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute
Address: 2796 Overseas Highway Ste 119
Marathon, FL 33050
Phone: 305-289-2330
Fax: 305-289-2334
URL: GCFI Home Page

Distribution Information

Distribution 1

CC ID: 869745
Start Date: 2004
End Date: Present
Download URL: http://proceedings.gcfi.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/gcfi_55-62.pdf
Distributor: Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute (2004 - Present)
File Name: gcfi_55-62.pdf
File Type (Deprecated): PDF
Distribution Format: PDF - Adobe Portable Document Format
Compression: Uncompressed
Review Status: Chked Viruses Inapp Content

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 24255
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:24255
Metadata Record Created By: Sarah A O'Connor
Metadata Record Created: 2015-04-01 11:47+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: SysAdmin InPortAdmin
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2023-10-17 16:12+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2021-10-21
Owner Org: SEFSC
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2021-10-21
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2022-10-21