posted on 2023-05-19, 15:11authored byRosenberg, AA, Kleisner, KM, Afflerbach, J, Anderson, SC, Dickey-Collas, M, Cooper, AB, Fogarty, MJ, Elizabeth FultonElizabeth Fulton, Gutierrez, NL, Hyde, KJW, Jardim, E, Jensen, OP, Kristiansen, T, Longo, C, Minte-Vera, CV, Minto, C, Mosqueira, I, Osio, GC, Ovando, D, Selig, ER, Thorson, JT, Walsh, JC, Ye, Y
The exploitation status of marine fisheries stocks worldwide is of critical importance for food security, ecosystem conservation, and fishery sustainability. Applying a suite of data-limited methods to global catch data, combined through an ensemble modeling approach, we provide quantitative estimates of exploitation status for 785 fish stocks. Fifty-three percent (414 stocks) are below BMSY and of these, 265 are estimated to be below 80% of the BMSY level. While the 149 stocks above 80% of BMSY are conventionally considered “fully exploited,” stocks staying at this level for many years, forego substantial yield. Our results enable managers to consider more detailed information than simply a categorization of stocks as “fully” or “over” exploited. Our approach is reproducible, allows consistent application to a broad range of stocks, and can be easily updated as new data become available. Applied on an ongoing basis, this approach can provide critical, more detailed information for resource management for more exploited fish stocks than currently available.
History
Publication title
Conservation Letters
Volume
11
Article number
e12363
Number
e12363
Pagination
1-9
ISSN
1755-263X
Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 the Author. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/