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Monitoring, assessing, and managing fish
stocks in Lake Malawi/Nyassa: Current approaches and future
possibilities
W R.T. Darwall1*
and E. H. Allison2
1Species
Programme, The World Conservation Union (IUCN), Cambridge,
United Kingdom 2School of
Development Studies, University of East Anglia
*Corresponding author: IUCN Species Programme, 219c Huntington
Road, Cambridge CR3 ODL, UK
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Abstract
Approaches to the provision of advice on
fishery management are changing from reliance on single species
stock assessments to multi-species, multi-gear and ecosystem approaches.
Many of these new approaches may, however, be too expensive to apply
to small-scale fisheries in developing countries. The fish stocks
of Lake Malawi/Nyassa are currently managed by restrictions on fishing
gears, fishing areas, and fishing times. Catch statistics and an
annual frame survey of fishing effort provide input data for stock
assessment studies that are used to derive these recommendations.
This management approach is ineffective with several important fish
stocks in decline, reports of local species extinctions, and changes
in community structure as a result of the disappearance of larger
get, more valuable species. Failure to enforce management regulations
results partly from an imbalance of economic and human resource
allocation between the collection of monitoring data, timely analysis
of that data, production of workable recommendations, and enforcement
of these recommendations. We recommend redressing the imbalance
through a reduction in the scale of catch surveys so that resources
can be redirected towards data processing, timely provision of advice,
management actions, and enforcement. A number of further modifications
are recommended to improve and better match the levels of precision
of catch and effort data. The implications of current moves away
from "state-led" management to "community-based" management are
discussed briefly.
Keywords: fisheries statistics, fisheries monitoring,
African Great Lakes
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