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To manage fishing, it is important to know what is being caught. But it is often challenging to collect thorough, accurate catch data for small-scale fisheries. A method called catch reconstruction offers a way to estimate catch using supplemental data to help build an understanding of this crucial but underrepresented sector.
Catch reconstruction uses a broad range of information—including government data, scientific literature, and expert knowledge—to estimate the current and historic catch of small-scale fisheries. These estimates are not a substitute for the global data reported by countries to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Rather, they are a supplement that can indicate important trends and provide guidance on how best to improve data collection.
The following shows how researchers from the Sea Around Us project of the University of British Columbia, in collaboration with local experts and researchers, reconstructed catch of small-scale fisheries for The Bahamas, Senegal, and Belize and the ways in which the data could be used to better manage the fisheries.
Tourism is the main industry in The Bahamas, and it drives a large recreational fishery for open-water fish such as mackerel, mahimahi, marlin, and tuna. But official data cover only commercial fishing, and these are known to be underreported because officials cannot track and survey all landing sites throughout the archipelago.
Catch reconstruction may be helpful in improving Bahamian fishery data because it points to the great importance of recreational fishing, which removes a large biomass and targets large-bodied fish. Larger, older fish are critical to reproduction in many species.
To reconstruct the catch for 1950 to 2010, researchers used the following methods:
Senegal has abundant marine resources, and small-scale fishing accounts for the large majority of the catch that is landed domestically. Small-scale fishing is also a vital source of food and employment, yet a catch reconstruction published in 2013 suggested that it is substantially underreported. Artisanal catches from Senegalese waters are decreasing despite increasing effort, suggesting overcapacity.
Senegal is working to develop a new approach to expand monitoring to include all landing sites and sectors and to involve fishers in collecting data. It has used catch-reconstruction data to guide these efforts, and official reports now use the reconstructed estimate for illegal fishing.
To reconstruct the catch for 1950 to 2010, researchers used the following methods:
Official fisheries data for Belize cover only exports and fish sold through fishing cooperatives. A 2011 catch reconstruction estimated that actual catch is 3.5 times the official tally and showed a decline in the finfish catch for the first time, demonstrating the need for better data. About 95 percent of the catch is from small-scale fisheries.
The decline in the finfish catch suggests the need for improved reporting on the catch of small-scale fisheries and periodic surveys of the size, age, and species of fish being caught. Such data would help discern whether the decline is driven by reduced fishing effort or by a decline in fish populations.
To reconstruct the catch for 1950 to 2010, researchers used the following methods: