Data used to assess historical changes (1905-present) in catch size and composition reflecting altering fisheries practices on a small Caribbean island ...

Effective assessments of the status of Caribbean fish communities require historical baselines to adequately understand how much fish communities have changed through time. To identify such changes and their causes, we compiled a historical overview using data collected at the beginning (1905-1908), middle (1958-1965) and end (1984-2016) of the 20th century, of the artisanal fishing practices and their effects on fish populations around Curaçao, a small island in the southern Caribbean. We documented historical trends in total catch, species composition, and catch sizes per fisher per month fo... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Vermeij, Mark
Latijnhouwers, Kelly
Dilrosun, Faisal
Chamberland, Valerie
Dube, Caroline
Van Buurt, Gerard
Debrot, Dolfi
Dokumenttyp: dataset
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Verlag/Hrsg.: SEANOE
Schlagwörter: Curacao / Overfishing / Caribbean / Historic data / Grouper / Sequential overfishing
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28976303
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dx.doi.org/10.17882/60223

Effective assessments of the status of Caribbean fish communities require historical baselines to adequately understand how much fish communities have changed through time. To identify such changes and their causes, we compiled a historical overview using data collected at the beginning (1905-1908), middle (1958-1965) and end (1984-2016) of the 20th century, of the artisanal fishing practices and their effects on fish populations around Curaçao, a small island in the southern Caribbean. We documented historical trends in total catch, species composition, and catch sizes per fisher per month for different types of fisheries and related these to technological and environmental changes affecting the island’s fisheries and fish communities. We found that since 1905, fishers targeted species increasingly farther from shore after species occurring closer to shore had become rare. This resulted in surprisingly similar catches in terms of weight, but not composition. Large predatory reef fishes living close to shore ...