Ecological indicators for coral reef fisheries management

Coral reef fisheries are of great importance both economically and for food security, but many reefs are showing evidence of overfishing, with significant ecosystem‐level consequences for reef condition. In response, ecological indicators have been developed to assess the state of reef fisheries and...

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Published in:Fish and fisheries (Oxford, England) Vol. 17; no. 4; pp. 1029 - 1054
Main Authors: Nash, Kirsty L, Graham, Nicholas A J
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-12-2016
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Summary:Coral reef fisheries are of great importance both economically and for food security, but many reefs are showing evidence of overfishing, with significant ecosystem‐level consequences for reef condition. In response, ecological indicators have been developed to assess the state of reef fisheries and their broader ecosystem‐level impacts. To date, use of fisheries indicators for coral reefs has been rather piecemeal, with no overarching understanding of their performance with respect to highlighting fishing effects. Here, we provide a review of multispecies fishery‐independent indicators used to evaluate fishing impacts on coral reefs. We investigate the consistency with which indicators highlight fishing effects on coral reefs. We then address questions of statistical power and uncertainty, type of fishing gradient, scale of analysis, the influence of other variables and the need for more work to set reference points for empirical, fisheries‐independent indicators on coral reefs. Our review provides knowledge that will help underpin the assessment of the ecological effects of fishing, offering essential support for the development and implementation of coral reef fisheries management plans.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-DKVL4T0F-V
Table S1. Publications included in review. Table S2. Summary of gradients used in publications. Table S3. Summary of survey methods used in publications. Table S4. Summary of indicators used in publications. Table S5. Summary of scales of analysis used in publications. Table S6. Methods for estimating indicators. Figure S1. Effects of fishing on community level density indicators across different scales of analysis. Figure S2. Effects of fishing on community level density indicators across different types of fishing gradient.
Royal Society
istex:E292A5AC3F4C2736271B602D16634314D53B07E1
ArticleID:FAF12157
Australian Research Council
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1467-2960
1467-2979
DOI:10.1111/faf.12157