An evolutionary look and application to an ongoing commitment : the ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management

Marine fisheries worldwide have relied heavily on single-species assessment models for evaluating fish stock status, and as a basis for fisheries management. The collapse of numerous fish stocks around the world, notably the Northern Cod stock of the northwest Atlantic, has many fishers, resource ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fancy, Adam
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/2066/
https://research.library.mun.ca/2066/1/Fancy_Adam.pdf
https://research.library.mun.ca/2066/3/Fancy_Adam.pdf
Description
Summary:Marine fisheries worldwide have relied heavily on single-species assessment models for evaluating fish stock status, and as a basis for fisheries management. The collapse of numerous fish stocks around the world, notably the Northern Cod stock of the northwest Atlantic, has many fishers, resource management experts, non-governmental fisheries organizations, academics and other management organizations questioning the efficacy of traditional evolutionary look and application to an ongoing commitment single-species approaches. Consequently, resource management institutions, particularly Regional Fishery Management Organizations, are moving to a more integrated and inclusive system - the ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management. -- The genesis and evolution of the ecosystem approach through to its eventual application in modern fisheries management is described, as is the effort and success organizations have experienced in advancing what is inarguably a complex and elusive concept to apply in practical terms. The analysis of a broad range of past international agreements, conservation frameworks and conventions illustrates how the ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management evolved from a loosely defined objective to what is effectively a new "tool" for fisheries management practice. Two case studies of contrasting fisheries management regimes will demonstrate how the ecosystem-based approach is being adopted and applied in a modern context.