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Summary

DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00328.x

Description

Although the impacts of industrial fishing are widely recognized, marine ecosystems are generally considered less threatened by artisanal fisheries. To determine how coral reef fish assemblages and benthic communities are affected by artisanal fishing, we studied six Caribbean islands on which fishing pressure ranged from virtually none in Bonaire, increasing through Saba, Puerto Rico, St Lucia, and Dominica, and reaching very high intensities in Jamaica. Using stationary‐point fish counts at 5 m and 15 m depth, we counted and estimated the lengths of all noncryptic, diurnal fish species within replicate 10‐m‐diameter areas. We estimated percent cover of coral and algae and determined reef structural complexity. From fish numbers and lengths we calculated mean fish biomass per count for the five most commercially important families. Groupers (Serranidae), snappers (Lutjanidae), parrotfish (Scaridae), and surgeonfish (Acanthuridae) showed order‐of‐magnitude differences in biomass among islands. Biomass fell as fishing pressure increased. Only grunts (Haemulidae) did not follow this pattern. Within families, larger‐bodied species decreased as fishing intensified. Coral cover and structural complexity were highest on little‐fished islands and lowest on those most fished. By contrast, algal cover was an order of magnitude higher in Jamaica than in Bonaire. These results suggest that following the Caribbean‐wide mass mortality of herbivorous sea urchins in 1983–1984 and consequent declines in grazing pressure on reefs, herbivorous fishes have not controlled algae overgrowing corals in heavily fished areas but have restricted growth in lightly fished areas. In summary, differences among islands in the structure of fish and benthic assemblages suggest that intensive artisanal fishing has transformed Caribbean reefs.

Document Information

Document Format
Acrobat Portable Document Format

Publication Date
2004-01-30

Distribution Information

Contact Information

Distributor
SEDAR
(843) 571-4366

Item Identification

Title: S8DW18 Effects of artisinal fishing on Caribbean coral reefs
Status: Completed
Creation Date: 2002-07-25
Revision Date: 2020-06-11
Publication Date: 2004-01-30
Abstract:

Although the impacts of industrial fishing are widely recognized, marine ecosystems are generally considered less threatened by artisanal fisheries. To determine how coral reef fish assemblages and benthic communities are affected by artisanal fishing, we studied six Caribbean islands on which fishing pressure ranged from virtually none in Bonaire, increasing through Saba, Puerto Rico, St Lucia, and Dominica, and reaching very high intensities in Jamaica. Using stationary‐point fish counts at 5 m and 15 m depth, we counted and estimated the lengths of all noncryptic, diurnal fish species within replicate 10‐m‐diameter areas. We estimated percent cover of coral and algae and determined reef structural complexity. From fish numbers and lengths we calculated mean fish biomass per count for the five most commercially important families. Groupers (Serranidae), snappers (Lutjanidae), parrotfish (Scaridae), and surgeonfish (Acanthuridae) showed order‐of‐magnitude differences in biomass among islands. Biomass fell as fishing pressure increased. Only grunts (Haemulidae) did not follow this pattern. Within families, larger‐bodied species decreased as fishing intensified. Coral cover and structural complexity were highest on little‐fished islands and lowest on those most fished. By contrast, algal cover was an order of magnitude higher in Jamaica than in Bonaire. These results suggest that following the Caribbean‐wide mass mortality of herbivorous sea urchins in 1983–1984 and consequent declines in grazing pressure on reefs, herbivorous fishes have not controlled algae overgrowing corals in heavily fished areas but have restricted growth in lightly fished areas. In summary, differences among islands in the structure of fish and benthic assemblages suggest that intensive artisanal fishing has transformed Caribbean reefs.

Other Citation Details:

HAWKINS, J.P. and ROBERTS, C.M. (2004), Effects of Artisanal Fishing on Caribbean Coral Reefs. Conservation Biology, 18: 215-226. doi:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00328.x

DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00328.x

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
SEDAR Spiny Lobster

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None Caribbean
None Puerto Rico
None Virgin Islands

Document Information

Format: Acrobat Portable Document Format
Status Code: Final

Support Roles

Distributor

CC ID: 910108
Date Effective From: 2005
Date Effective To:
Contact (Organization): SEDAR
Address: 4055 Faber Place
North Charleston, SC 29405
United States
Phone: (843) 571-4366
URL: http://sedarweb.org

Distribution Information

Distribution 1

CC ID: 910109
Start Date: 2004
End Date: Present
Download URL: https://sedarweb.org/docs/wpapers/S8DW_18.pdf
Distributor: SEDAR (2005 - Present)
File Name: S8DW_18.pdf
Compression: Uncompressed
Review Status: Chked Viruses Inapp Content

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 59966
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:59966
Metadata Record Created By: Lee M Weinberger
Metadata Record Created: 2020-06-08 06:30+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: SysAdmin InPortAdmin
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2023-08-15 17:09+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2020-06-18
Owner Org: SEFSC
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2020-06-18
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2021-06-18