R.A. Myers’s scientific contributions

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Publications (3)


Management Effectiveness of the World's Marine Fisheries
  • Article
  • Full-text available

June 2009

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505 Reads

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269 Citations

PLOS Biology

C. Mora

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R.A. Myers

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[...]

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C. Roberts

Ongoing declines in production of the world's fisheries may have serious ecological and socioeconomic consequences. As a result, a number of international efforts have sought to improve management and prevent overexploitation, while helping to maintain biodiversity and a sustainable food supply. Although these initiatives have received broad acceptance, the extent to which corrective measures have been implemented and are effective remains largely unknown. We used a survey approach, validated with empirical data, and enquiries to over 13,000 fisheries experts (of which 1,188 responded) to assess the current effectiveness of fisheries management regimes worldwide; for each of those regimes, we also calculated the probable sustainability of reported catches to determine how management affects fisheries sustainability. Our survey shows that 7% of all coastal states undergo rigorous scientific assessment for the generation of management policies, 1.4% also have a participatory and transparent processes to convert scientific recommendations into policy, and 0.95% also provide for robust mechanisms to ensure the compliance with regulations; none is also free of the effects of excess fishing capacity, subsidies, or access to foreign fishing. A comparison of fisheries management attributes with the sustainability of reported fisheries catches indicated that the conversion of scientific advice into policy, through a participatory and transparent process, is at the core of achieving fisheries sustainability, regardless of other attributes of the fisheries. Our results illustrate the great vulnerability of the world's fisheries and the urgent need to meet well-identified guidelines for sustainable management; they also provide a baseline against which future changes can be quantified.

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Citations (2)


... Few countries conduct thorough scientific evaluation to develop management policies, and even fewer have participatory and transparent processes to translate scientific recommendations into policy. It is difficult to find reliable mechanisms to ensure that regulations are followed (Mora et al., 2009). Suggestions for a change from government to governance have called for new policy tools to replace conventional command and control methods as well as a bigger role for civil society, notably of voluntary and nongovernmental organisations (NGOs), in managing the environment (Jordan et al., 2013). ...

Reference:

How fair is Fair Trade in fisheries?
Management Effectiveness of the World's Marine Fisheries

PLOS Biology

... The approach is encouraged by fisheries managers and directed subsidies, even in the absence of data on the new target species, the logic being that unfished or little-exploited populations are abundant enough not to need management control. The result, often repeated through history, is that the new species are soon overfished, and management action, when it is taken, is reactive, slow, insufficient and lacks transparency [86][87][88] . The plentiful examples of this problem demonstrate that sustainable fishing requires foreknowledge of stocks and pre-emptive regulation, especially in countries with industrial scale fleets and welldeveloped management capacity. ...

Management effectiveness of the World's marine fisheries
  • Citing Article
  • January 2009

PLOS Biology