CHICAGO — Guaranteeing individual fishermen a
share of the catch could help avert a global collapse of
fisheries, US researchers said on Thursday.
Such programs, known as catch-shares,
eliminate the frantic race to get the biggest share of the catch
as in traditional open-access fishing, a system that promotes
overfishing and habitat destruction, putting a key global food
supply at risk.
"Under open access, you have a free-for-all
race to fish, which ultimately leads to collapse," said
Christopher Costello of the University of California, Santa
Barbara, whose study appears in the journal Science.
"But when you allocate shares of the catch,
then there is an incentive to protect the stock, which reduces
collapse. We saw this across the globe," he said in a statement.
Costello said the study offered hope that
fisheries can resist the widespread collapse projected two years
ago by Canadian Boris Worm of Dalhousie University in Halifax.
Climate change and pollution compound the
threat to global fisheries, which supply protein to 2.6 billion
people worldwide.
Costello and colleagues studied 50 years of
data from 11,000 fisheries around the world.
"What we found is a management system called
catch shares reverses the global trend in fishery failures," he
said in a telephone briefing.
Catch shares, which are common in New
Zealand, Australia, Iceland, and increasingly the United States
and Canada, grant each shareholder a fixed portion of a
fishery’s total allowable catch, a figure set by scientists each
year.
These shares may be bought and sold, much
like shares in a company. They increase in value as the overall
fish population increases in size, giving each shareholder a
stake in improving the overall health of the fishery.
"Fisheries managed by this approach are
dramatically less likely to collapse," Costello said.
Costello said only about 1 percent of global
fisheries have adopted this new management system, but those
that have are half as likely to collapse as those using
traditional management systems.
"We found that fish fare far better when
people directly benefit from taking just the right number of
fish from the water," said Steven Gaines of UCSB, who worked on
the study.
"Fish populations rebound, and so do yields
from the fisheries," Gaines told reporters.
He pointed to the Alaskan halibut fishery as
an example of success. Before the switch to a catch share system
in 1995, the only way to control the overall catch was to shrink
the total season, which went from four months to just two to
three days.
This forced Halibut fishermen to use
dangerous fishing methods, loading down their boats with frozen
fish and compromising the quality of their catch.
Now, the season lasts nearly eight months,
and because they can properly store and manage the fish they
catch, they can charge more for it.
"Halibut fishermen were barely squeaking by, but now the
fishery is insanely profitable," Gaines said. – Reuters