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The Ecosystem Approach to
     Fisheries Management
An overview of interpretations of the concept
  & suggestions for how it can be put into
                  practice


              Dorothy J. Dankel
        PhD candidate, fisheries management
Lecture outline
• Setting the stage for the ecosystem approach
• Interpretations of EAF
   – Australia
   – Alaska
   – Norway
• Some EAF scientific state-of-the-art methods
• Putting EAF into practice
   – Benchmarking: RAPFISH as example
   – Moving forward with implementation: revisiting
     Australia, Alaska & Norway
• Summary & References
PART I
Setting the stage for the ecosystem
approach
UN Convention on Biological Diversity (2000): EA is a strategy for the
integrated mgmt of land, water, & living resources that promotes
conservation & sustainable use in an equitable way




        FAO (2003): EAF strives to balance diverse societal
        objectives, by taking account of the knowledge &
        uncertainties of biotic, abiotic & human components of
        ecosystems & applying an integrated approach to fisheries
        within ecologically meaningful boundaries
The fishery system               Charles 2001




                            Interdisciplinary
                                Science,
                                   EAF

                                                             open,
•Complexity & Diversity!                                interconnected,
•Human system is integral                                 complex, &
                                                            dynamic
Why the ecosystem approach?
• The whole ecosystem is worth more to humanity
  than the sum of its parts (Browman and Stergiou
  2004)
• But, the sum of all single spp. MSYs is larger than the
  estimated ecosystem MSY!
• Relative ”failure” of the conventional system
   – Societal concern over sustainability
• Marine fisheries do not exist in isolation
• Recognition that human fisheries impacts can
  change ecosystems
   – Can be ecologically, economically & socially detrimental
Theory behind EAF
• EAF is a ”new” natural resource paradigm
  –   MSY OMSY (Link 2002, Browman & Stergiou 2004)

  – The short-term pain of EAF is necessary to reap long-term
    benefits
  – Mechanism towards sustainable fisheries
• Need a holistic approach
  – To scientific advice, dialogue & implementation
• Manage for ecosystem ”health” & ”integrity”
  – Link (2002): avoid misnomers! Ecosystem can have more
    than 1 state!
      • ecosystem status & ecosystem status stability
Relationship to other paradigms

                       /Ecosystem-based
                       fisheries mgmt




                        Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
PART II
Interpretations of the Ecosystem
Approach to Fisheries
Interpretations of EAF
            There are many!



pragmatic                     idealistic
Interpretations of EAF
• ICES: Ecosystem-based marine management is an integrated
  management av human activity based on knowledge of the
  ecosystem’s dynamics in order to acheive sustainable use of
  goods & services from the ecosystem as well as maintaining
  the integrity of the ecosystem.
• CIEAF (2006, Bianchi et al. 2008): EAF has 2 dimensions
1.   Vertical dimension of application
2.   Horizontal dimension of integration of fisheries into different sectors for a
     holistic management plan
EAF is a strategy, not an ”action plan”, & must be tailored to each
   application
Australia’s interpretation of EAF
       (McLoughlin et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)

Four main threads to EBFM:
1. Application of mgmt actions (incl decision rules)
   to reduce ecosystem impacts to acceptable level
2. Ecological & stock assmts to inform mgmt
  –   Ecological risk assmts
  –   Harvest strategy policies  determine TACs/ITQs for
      32 stocks
3. Info & data collection to support assmts
4. Education & capacity building to bring the
   fishing industry & other key stakeholders in the
   process
Alaska’s interpretation of EAF (Witherell et al. 2000 )
   Definition: Ecosystem-based management is a strategy to
     regulate human activity towards maintaining long-term
     system sustainability (within the range of natural
     variability as we understand it) of the North Pacific.
   Objective: To provide future generations the opportunities &
     resources we enjoy today.
   Important understandings:
   1. Uncontrolled human population growth & consequent
      demand for resources is inconsistent with sustainability
   2. Ecosystem-based mgmt requires time scales that
      transcend human lifetimes
   3. Ecosystems are open, interconnected, complex, &
      dynamic
Norway’s interpretation of EAF
• New Ocean Resource Act (Havressursloven)
  – Manage resources in a sustainable & socio-economic
    profitable way (preserving both environ. & industry)
  – Preserve biological diversity as well as wild genetic
    material
  – Will work side by side with the new ”natural diversity act”
    (naturmagnfoldloven)
  – More advanced tracking of catches to punish & deter
    illegal fishing
  – ”Management principle” puts into law the power to
    management authorities to regulary assess resources &
    take appropriate measures
Quick summary of EAF interpretations:
    The old mgmt rules still apply
                but even more so in EAF!

 • Control/reduce the fishing mortality rate
   on target spp
 • Reduce bycatch & detrimental fishing
   practices
 • Integrate user groups in all stages of
   decision making
Challenges to EAF: mgmt & scientific
• Short-term pains
   – Lower F, effort, revenue
   – But, eco-tourism can gain
• Correct incentives to limit illegal behavior
  (Hilborn 2008 in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)

• Valuation of ecosystem goods and services
   – Speak the language of the industries ($)
• Creation and operation of
  ecosystem/fisheries system models
   – Bio-socio-economic analyses
   – Interdisciplinary science & decision making
Can the reason EAF has been
              so slow to implement
                because we are all
            waiting for someone else
                 to take the lead?
PART III
How scientists can embrace the
ecosystem approach: state-of-the-
art examples
Research requirements for EAF
          (O’Boyle et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)


1. Impact of a fishery on ecosystem (bottom
   trawling, etc)
2. Impact of ecosystem on fishery (warming
   waters, climate change effects, etc)
3. Manipulation of ecosystems thru mgmt
   and habitat mitigation (leave capelin for cod, etc)
Research requirements for EAF
         (O’Boyle et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)

• Understanding issues of:
  – biodiversity                        Link biodiversity to
  – productivity                     productivity & resilience,
  – habitat                          habitat type & sensitivity
     • Spatial/trophic processes/connectivity
     • Effects from climate change
• Ecological risk analyses
• Contextual ecosystem modelling
  – Ecopath/Ecosim (Walters et al. 1997), Atlantis (Fulton et
    al. 2004)
Discussion at IMR: What is an ecosystem
                cruise?
  • Exploration of abundance (qualitative &
    quantitative) & spp. distribution, their
    interactions & the ocean environemnt
     – Need knowledge on spp. & trophic interxns
        • Quantitative mapping of predator-prey
          relationships
        • Qualtitative knowledge on distribution & relative
          abundance, habitat choice & geographic
          distribution
     – Ocean environment can be measured thru specific
       parameters (temp., salinity, O2) via defined transects or
       on a regional scale
Setting the stage for
stakeholder dialogue: map out scenarios




                            Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
Mapping economic efficiency loss
 after ecosystem degradation




                        Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
Single sp. approach
                                                  MSY concept (Schaefer 1954)    ICES prec. Approach (1990s)
   Evolution from single spp. thinking to an
               Catch as func of effort without
               constraints (Huxley ca. 1880s)


          operational EAF paradigm
   EAF




                                               MSY as a ref pt. defining a      Kernel with complex system
                                               viability domain (Mace 2001)     trajectories of interacting
                                                                                components (Mullon et al. 2004)
Ecopath/Ecosim modelling (Pauly et al. 2000)
RAPFISH: appraising multi-disciplinary
     sustainability Pitcher & Preikshot, 2001




 A tool to evaluate the comparative sustainability of fisheries
RAPFISH: appraising multi-disciplinary
     sustainability Pitcher & Preikshot, 2001
Putting RAPFISH into practice in
            Brazil
An indicator of ecosystem status
      based on average trophic level & weight of total catch

                   catch, year i trophic level    mean catch at start of series

Fish in Balance                                                          mean trophic
   equation                                                             level at start of
                                                                             series
                  mean transfer efficiency at start of series (10%)




         Increasing trend indicate fisheries expansion but a decreasing trend
                                 indicates overfishing

                                                                Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
Hypothetical examples of mgmt measures
    & socially optimal fishing effort
Problem: shark bycatch




                  Diff btwn final E and socially opt. E is decreased



       Total net social welfare increases




                                                                Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
PART IV
Putting the ecosystem approach in
practice: examples from Australia
Alaska, & Norway
Implementing EAF in Australia
         (Fletcher 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)


• Substantial progress since 2000 due to:
  – Gov’t certified sustainable fisheries
  – Requirement for ALL Commonwealth-managed
    fisheries to submit a comprehensive
    application to address sustainable guidlines in
    order to continue exporting their catch
• Realization that motivation must come
  from within the country, community,
  industry for success
Main steps for implementing EAF in
  Australia (Fletcher 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)
1. Determine the scope of the assmt with clear
   descriptions of what you are assessing & what
   societal values need addressing
2. ID all issues across the range of EAF elements
3. Use a form of risk assmt or PA to determine
   issues needing direct action
4. Develop a formal mgmt system with clear
   operational obj based on Step 2, incl a way to
   assess performance against these objectives
        The system does not provide the answers,
             merely helps with the process!
Australian appl to a tuna fishery




pragmatic, staged, realistic approach to
EAF, which is a risk-based mgmt process, not
an excuse for more research




       from Fletcher 2008 (in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)
1.   Precautionary catch limits
2.   By-catch & discard limits
3.   Marine mammal & seabird considerations
4.   MPAs
5.   Continued adaptive
     learning towards EBFM
Examples of integrated management




   • coordination btwn sectors
   • ID knowledge gaps
   • strengthen environmental monitoring programs through a
   broad advisory group
   • new reference group of stakeholders to express views
   • co-existence between industries
   • preserve biodiversity
• consequences of climate change & acidification
• agenda for sustainable use, incl. wind turbines,
integration of different interests
How can fisheries management
         embrace EAF?
• Initiate dialogue with stakeholders
  – Scientists as facilitators
  – Get them on board early
• Be explicit about uncertainty
• Be adaptive & reactive (science & mgmt)
• Science & mgmt should include experts in
  all relevant components
  –   Biology
  –   Stock assessment
                                 components of EAF
  –   Socio-economics
  –   Enforcement/incentives
Summary
• EAF strives for long term sustainable fisheries
   – implies a new scientific aproach to the fishery system with broader range
     of disciplines working together
   – implies lower fishing mortality rates (short-term pain for long-term gain)
   – EAF is a strategy & the specific tactics need to be regionally tailored
• EAF interpretations: idealistic vs. pragmatic
   – plethora of EAF definitions has contributed to implementation stalling
   – Australia: need to be pragmatic, focus on risk-based mgmt
• In some areas, EAF is implemented
   – but there is a steep learning curve
   – Norway can be world leaders in cross-sectoral ecosystem mgmt
• Scientific challenge is to give ecosystem advice to
  managers
   – need to further develop ecosystem models & integrate with socio-
     economic models
References Cited (reading list incl as handout)
 Bianchi G and Skjodal HR, eds. 2008. The Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries. FAO 2008.
 Browman & Stergiou. 2004. Perspectives on ecosystem-based approaches to the management of marine resources.
       Marine Ecology Progress Series 274:269-303.
 Charles AT (2001). Sustainable Fishery Systems, Blackwell Science Ltd.
 Cury et al. 2004. Viability theory for an ecosystem approach to fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 62:577-584.
 FAO. 2003. The ecosystem approach to fisheries: Issues, terminology, principles, institutional foundations,
       implementation and outlook. FAO Fisheries Technical Paper 443.
 FAO. 2008. Human dimensions of the ecosystem approach to fisheries: An overview of context, concepts, tools and
       methods. FAO Fisheries Technical Paper 485.
 Fulton, EA, Smith ADM & Punt AE. 2004. Ecological indicators of the ecosystem effects of fishing: Final Report. Report
       No. R99/1546. Australian Fisheries Management Authority, Canberra, Australia.
 Isaac RV, Santo WE, Bentes B, Frédou FL, Mourão and Frédou T. 2009. An interdisciplinary evaluation of fishery
       production systems off the state of Pará in North Brazil. Journal of Apllied Ichthyology 25:244-255.
 Link J. 2002. What does ecosystem-based fisheries management mean? Fisheries, vol 27 no. 4.
 Martins AS, dos Santos LB, Pizetta GT, Monjardim C and Doxsey JR: Interdisciplinary assessment of the status quo of
       the marine fishery state of Espirito Santo, Brazil, using RAPFISH. Journal of Applied Ichthyology 35:269-276.
 Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Report No. 8 to the Storting. (2005-2006) Integrated Management of the
       Marine Environment of the Barents Sea and the Sea Areas off the Lofoten Islands.
 Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Report No. 37 to the Storting. (2008-2009) Integrated Management of the
       Marine Environment of the Norwegian Sea. (in Norwegian, but a translation will most likely be forthcoming)
 Pitcher TJ and Preikshot D. 2001. RAPFISH: a rapid appraisal technique to evaluate the sustainability status of
       fisheries. Fisheries Research 49:255-270.
 Pitcher et al. 2009. An evaluation of progress in implementing ecosystem-based management of fisheries in 33
       countries. Marine Policy, 33:223-232.
 Walters CJ, Christiansen V and Pauly D. 1997. Structuring dynamic models of exploited ecosystems from trophic mass-
       balance assessments. Reviews in Fish Biology & Fisheries 7, 1-34.
 Witherell et al. 2000. An ecosystem-based approach for Alaska groundfish fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science,
       57: 771-777.
Key references from FAO
Here are some slides that were not
included in the trial lecture because
 they represent my own views, but
        may be interesting...
Why the Ecosystem Approach must focus
             on dialogue
                 Bottom-up decision




                      managers /
        scientists      gov’t         stakeholders


        – More branches of science
        – More interaction on compatible objectives
        – More dynamic communication leading to
          autonomy and user buy-in
Achieving integrated management
• HCRs have strategic potential
  – As a meeting place for
    stakeholder/manager/scientist collaboration
  – Stakeholder dialogue & buy-in
  – As a concrete collaborative product




                     HCR
Communication workshops
             for successful EAF
• Internal within marine reasearch institutes
   – How to present results to managers, communicate uncertainty
• Round-table workshops (sponsored by EU/local governments)
   – Trust- & communication-building, transparency, autonomy


No loss of objectivity or ethics in dynamic communication!


         stakeholders                        managers


                             scientists        It’s not the plan, it’s the planning
                                                              - Winston Churchill
Visualizing science paradigms
      Normal science     Post-normal science
        Academic          Academic & social
     Mono-disciplinary    Trans-disciplinary
       Technocratic         Participative
          Certain            Uncertain
        Predictive           exploratory

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Dorothy's presentation on the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries

  • 1.
  • 2. The Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries Management An overview of interpretations of the concept & suggestions for how it can be put into practice Dorothy J. Dankel PhD candidate, fisheries management
  • 3. Lecture outline • Setting the stage for the ecosystem approach • Interpretations of EAF – Australia – Alaska – Norway • Some EAF scientific state-of-the-art methods • Putting EAF into practice – Benchmarking: RAPFISH as example – Moving forward with implementation: revisiting Australia, Alaska & Norway • Summary & References
  • 4. PART I Setting the stage for the ecosystem approach
  • 5. UN Convention on Biological Diversity (2000): EA is a strategy for the integrated mgmt of land, water, & living resources that promotes conservation & sustainable use in an equitable way FAO (2003): EAF strives to balance diverse societal objectives, by taking account of the knowledge & uncertainties of biotic, abiotic & human components of ecosystems & applying an integrated approach to fisheries within ecologically meaningful boundaries
  • 6. The fishery system Charles 2001 Interdisciplinary Science, EAF open, •Complexity & Diversity! interconnected, •Human system is integral complex, & dynamic
  • 7. Why the ecosystem approach? • The whole ecosystem is worth more to humanity than the sum of its parts (Browman and Stergiou 2004) • But, the sum of all single spp. MSYs is larger than the estimated ecosystem MSY! • Relative ”failure” of the conventional system – Societal concern over sustainability • Marine fisheries do not exist in isolation • Recognition that human fisheries impacts can change ecosystems – Can be ecologically, economically & socially detrimental
  • 8. Theory behind EAF • EAF is a ”new” natural resource paradigm – MSY OMSY (Link 2002, Browman & Stergiou 2004) – The short-term pain of EAF is necessary to reap long-term benefits – Mechanism towards sustainable fisheries • Need a holistic approach – To scientific advice, dialogue & implementation • Manage for ecosystem ”health” & ”integrity” – Link (2002): avoid misnomers! Ecosystem can have more than 1 state! • ecosystem status & ecosystem status stability
  • 9. Relationship to other paradigms /Ecosystem-based fisheries mgmt Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
  • 10. PART II Interpretations of the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries
  • 11. Interpretations of EAF There are many! pragmatic idealistic
  • 12. Interpretations of EAF • ICES: Ecosystem-based marine management is an integrated management av human activity based on knowledge of the ecosystem’s dynamics in order to acheive sustainable use of goods & services from the ecosystem as well as maintaining the integrity of the ecosystem. • CIEAF (2006, Bianchi et al. 2008): EAF has 2 dimensions 1. Vertical dimension of application 2. Horizontal dimension of integration of fisheries into different sectors for a holistic management plan EAF is a strategy, not an ”action plan”, & must be tailored to each application
  • 13. Australia’s interpretation of EAF (McLoughlin et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) Four main threads to EBFM: 1. Application of mgmt actions (incl decision rules) to reduce ecosystem impacts to acceptable level 2. Ecological & stock assmts to inform mgmt – Ecological risk assmts – Harvest strategy policies  determine TACs/ITQs for 32 stocks 3. Info & data collection to support assmts 4. Education & capacity building to bring the fishing industry & other key stakeholders in the process
  • 14. Alaska’s interpretation of EAF (Witherell et al. 2000 ) Definition: Ecosystem-based management is a strategy to regulate human activity towards maintaining long-term system sustainability (within the range of natural variability as we understand it) of the North Pacific. Objective: To provide future generations the opportunities & resources we enjoy today. Important understandings: 1. Uncontrolled human population growth & consequent demand for resources is inconsistent with sustainability 2. Ecosystem-based mgmt requires time scales that transcend human lifetimes 3. Ecosystems are open, interconnected, complex, & dynamic
  • 15. Norway’s interpretation of EAF • New Ocean Resource Act (Havressursloven) – Manage resources in a sustainable & socio-economic profitable way (preserving both environ. & industry) – Preserve biological diversity as well as wild genetic material – Will work side by side with the new ”natural diversity act” (naturmagnfoldloven) – More advanced tracking of catches to punish & deter illegal fishing – ”Management principle” puts into law the power to management authorities to regulary assess resources & take appropriate measures
  • 16. Quick summary of EAF interpretations: The old mgmt rules still apply but even more so in EAF! • Control/reduce the fishing mortality rate on target spp • Reduce bycatch & detrimental fishing practices • Integrate user groups in all stages of decision making
  • 17. Challenges to EAF: mgmt & scientific • Short-term pains – Lower F, effort, revenue – But, eco-tourism can gain • Correct incentives to limit illegal behavior (Hilborn 2008 in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) • Valuation of ecosystem goods and services – Speak the language of the industries ($) • Creation and operation of ecosystem/fisheries system models – Bio-socio-economic analyses – Interdisciplinary science & decision making
  • 18. Can the reason EAF has been so slow to implement because we are all waiting for someone else to take the lead? PART III How scientists can embrace the ecosystem approach: state-of-the- art examples
  • 19. Research requirements for EAF (O’Boyle et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) 1. Impact of a fishery on ecosystem (bottom trawling, etc) 2. Impact of ecosystem on fishery (warming waters, climate change effects, etc) 3. Manipulation of ecosystems thru mgmt and habitat mitigation (leave capelin for cod, etc)
  • 20. Research requirements for EAF (O’Boyle et al. 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) • Understanding issues of: – biodiversity Link biodiversity to – productivity productivity & resilience, – habitat habitat type & sensitivity • Spatial/trophic processes/connectivity • Effects from climate change • Ecological risk analyses • Contextual ecosystem modelling – Ecopath/Ecosim (Walters et al. 1997), Atlantis (Fulton et al. 2004)
  • 21. Discussion at IMR: What is an ecosystem cruise? • Exploration of abundance (qualitative & quantitative) & spp. distribution, their interactions & the ocean environemnt – Need knowledge on spp. & trophic interxns • Quantitative mapping of predator-prey relationships • Qualtitative knowledge on distribution & relative abundance, habitat choice & geographic distribution – Ocean environment can be measured thru specific parameters (temp., salinity, O2) via defined transects or on a regional scale
  • 22.
  • 23. Setting the stage for stakeholder dialogue: map out scenarios Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
  • 24. Mapping economic efficiency loss after ecosystem degradation Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
  • 25. Single sp. approach MSY concept (Schaefer 1954) ICES prec. Approach (1990s) Evolution from single spp. thinking to an Catch as func of effort without constraints (Huxley ca. 1880s) operational EAF paradigm EAF MSY as a ref pt. defining a Kernel with complex system viability domain (Mace 2001) trajectories of interacting components (Mullon et al. 2004) Ecopath/Ecosim modelling (Pauly et al. 2000)
  • 26. RAPFISH: appraising multi-disciplinary sustainability Pitcher & Preikshot, 2001 A tool to evaluate the comparative sustainability of fisheries
  • 27. RAPFISH: appraising multi-disciplinary sustainability Pitcher & Preikshot, 2001
  • 28. Putting RAPFISH into practice in Brazil
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. An indicator of ecosystem status based on average trophic level & weight of total catch catch, year i trophic level mean catch at start of series Fish in Balance mean trophic equation level at start of series mean transfer efficiency at start of series (10%) Increasing trend indicate fisheries expansion but a decreasing trend indicates overfishing Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
  • 32. Hypothetical examples of mgmt measures & socially optimal fishing effort Problem: shark bycatch Diff btwn final E and socially opt. E is decreased Total net social welfare increases Source: FAO Fisheries Tech. Paper 489
  • 33. PART IV Putting the ecosystem approach in practice: examples from Australia Alaska, & Norway
  • 34. Implementing EAF in Australia (Fletcher 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) • Substantial progress since 2000 due to: – Gov’t certified sustainable fisheries – Requirement for ALL Commonwealth-managed fisheries to submit a comprehensive application to address sustainable guidlines in order to continue exporting their catch • Realization that motivation must come from within the country, community, industry for success
  • 35. Main steps for implementing EAF in Australia (Fletcher 2008, in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008) 1. Determine the scope of the assmt with clear descriptions of what you are assessing & what societal values need addressing 2. ID all issues across the range of EAF elements 3. Use a form of risk assmt or PA to determine issues needing direct action 4. Develop a formal mgmt system with clear operational obj based on Step 2, incl a way to assess performance against these objectives The system does not provide the answers, merely helps with the process!
  • 36. Australian appl to a tuna fishery pragmatic, staged, realistic approach to EAF, which is a risk-based mgmt process, not an excuse for more research from Fletcher 2008 (in Bianchi & Skjodal 2008)
  • 37. 1. Precautionary catch limits 2. By-catch & discard limits 3. Marine mammal & seabird considerations 4. MPAs 5. Continued adaptive learning towards EBFM
  • 38. Examples of integrated management • coordination btwn sectors • ID knowledge gaps • strengthen environmental monitoring programs through a broad advisory group • new reference group of stakeholders to express views • co-existence between industries • preserve biodiversity
  • 39. • consequences of climate change & acidification • agenda for sustainable use, incl. wind turbines, integration of different interests
  • 40. How can fisheries management embrace EAF? • Initiate dialogue with stakeholders – Scientists as facilitators – Get them on board early • Be explicit about uncertainty • Be adaptive & reactive (science & mgmt) • Science & mgmt should include experts in all relevant components – Biology – Stock assessment components of EAF – Socio-economics – Enforcement/incentives
  • 41. Summary • EAF strives for long term sustainable fisheries – implies a new scientific aproach to the fishery system with broader range of disciplines working together – implies lower fishing mortality rates (short-term pain for long-term gain) – EAF is a strategy & the specific tactics need to be regionally tailored • EAF interpretations: idealistic vs. pragmatic – plethora of EAF definitions has contributed to implementation stalling – Australia: need to be pragmatic, focus on risk-based mgmt • In some areas, EAF is implemented – but there is a steep learning curve – Norway can be world leaders in cross-sectoral ecosystem mgmt • Scientific challenge is to give ecosystem advice to managers – need to further develop ecosystem models & integrate with socio- economic models
  • 42. References Cited (reading list incl as handout) Bianchi G and Skjodal HR, eds. 2008. The Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries. FAO 2008. Browman & Stergiou. 2004. Perspectives on ecosystem-based approaches to the management of marine resources. Marine Ecology Progress Series 274:269-303. Charles AT (2001). Sustainable Fishery Systems, Blackwell Science Ltd. Cury et al. 2004. Viability theory for an ecosystem approach to fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 62:577-584. FAO. 2003. The ecosystem approach to fisheries: Issues, terminology, principles, institutional foundations, implementation and outlook. FAO Fisheries Technical Paper 443. FAO. 2008. Human dimensions of the ecosystem approach to fisheries: An overview of context, concepts, tools and methods. FAO Fisheries Technical Paper 485. Fulton, EA, Smith ADM & Punt AE. 2004. Ecological indicators of the ecosystem effects of fishing: Final Report. Report No. R99/1546. Australian Fisheries Management Authority, Canberra, Australia. Isaac RV, Santo WE, Bentes B, Frédou FL, Mourão and Frédou T. 2009. An interdisciplinary evaluation of fishery production systems off the state of Pará in North Brazil. Journal of Apllied Ichthyology 25:244-255. Link J. 2002. What does ecosystem-based fisheries management mean? Fisheries, vol 27 no. 4. Martins AS, dos Santos LB, Pizetta GT, Monjardim C and Doxsey JR: Interdisciplinary assessment of the status quo of the marine fishery state of Espirito Santo, Brazil, using RAPFISH. Journal of Applied Ichthyology 35:269-276. Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Report No. 8 to the Storting. (2005-2006) Integrated Management of the Marine Environment of the Barents Sea and the Sea Areas off the Lofoten Islands. Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Report No. 37 to the Storting. (2008-2009) Integrated Management of the Marine Environment of the Norwegian Sea. (in Norwegian, but a translation will most likely be forthcoming) Pitcher TJ and Preikshot D. 2001. RAPFISH: a rapid appraisal technique to evaluate the sustainability status of fisheries. Fisheries Research 49:255-270. Pitcher et al. 2009. An evaluation of progress in implementing ecosystem-based management of fisheries in 33 countries. Marine Policy, 33:223-232. Walters CJ, Christiansen V and Pauly D. 1997. Structuring dynamic models of exploited ecosystems from trophic mass- balance assessments. Reviews in Fish Biology & Fisheries 7, 1-34. Witherell et al. 2000. An ecosystem-based approach for Alaska groundfish fisheries. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 57: 771-777.
  • 44. Here are some slides that were not included in the trial lecture because they represent my own views, but may be interesting...
  • 45. Why the Ecosystem Approach must focus on dialogue Bottom-up decision managers / scientists gov’t stakeholders – More branches of science – More interaction on compatible objectives – More dynamic communication leading to autonomy and user buy-in
  • 46. Achieving integrated management • HCRs have strategic potential – As a meeting place for stakeholder/manager/scientist collaboration – Stakeholder dialogue & buy-in – As a concrete collaborative product HCR
  • 47. Communication workshops for successful EAF • Internal within marine reasearch institutes – How to present results to managers, communicate uncertainty • Round-table workshops (sponsored by EU/local governments) – Trust- & communication-building, transparency, autonomy No loss of objectivity or ethics in dynamic communication! stakeholders managers scientists It’s not the plan, it’s the planning - Winston Churchill
  • 48. Visualizing science paradigms Normal science Post-normal science Academic Academic & social Mono-disciplinary Trans-disciplinary Technocratic Participative Certain Uncertain Predictive exploratory