Integrating habitat restoration and fisheries management: A small-scale case-study to support EEL conservation at the global scale

International audience The aim of this work was to develop a methodological framework for the management of local eel stocks that integrates habitat restoration with optimal fishery management. The Bolsena lake (Viterbo, Italy) and its emissary, the river Marta, were taken as a reference system. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Knowledge and Management of Aquatic Ecosystems
Main Authors: Ciccotti, E., Leone, C., Bevacqua, Danièle, De Leo, Giulio Alessandro, Tancioni, L., Capoccioni, F.
Other Authors: Dipartimento Biol, University of Naples Federico II, Unité de recherche Plantes et Systèmes de Culture Horticoles (PSH), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), University of Parma = Università degli studi di Parma Parme, Italie, Stanford University
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2012
Subjects:
AGE
Online Access:https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02646658
https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02646658/document
https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02646658/file/2012_Ciccotti_Knowl.%20Managt.%20Aquatic%20Ecosyst_1.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1051/kmae/2012030
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Summary:International audience The aim of this work was to develop a methodological framework for the management of local eel stocks that integrates habitat restoration with optimal fishery management. The Bolsena lake (Viterbo, Italy) and its emissary, the river Marta, were taken as a reference system. The river flows in the Mediterranean sea but its course is fragmented by a number of dams built in the past century preventing eel migration from and to the sea. Eel fishery in the Bolsena lake is thus sustained by periodic stocking of glass eels caught at the Marta river estuary. A detailed demographic model was applied to simulate fishery yields and potential spawner escapement under different recruitment and management scenarios. It was estimated that the high exploitation rates occurring in the nineties reduced the potential spawner escapement from the Bolsena lake to less than 1 t; under current harvesting rates, the potential spawner escapement is estimated in about 12 t while in pristine conditions (i.e. high recruitment and no fishing) estimated spawner escapement is about 21 t. This analysis thus showed that current fishery management would comply with the 40% spawner escapement requirement of the EU regulation 1100/2007 if the connections between the Bolsena lake emissary and the sea were fully re-established. This confirms the opportunity of an integrated approach to management at the catchment area level scale for eel populations, that shall hopefully contribute to the conservation of the global stock.