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  • 09 Conference Proceedings
  • Consolidating the Strategies for Fishery Resources Enhancement in Southeast Asia. Proceedings of the Symposium on Strategy for Fisheries Resources Enhancement in the Southeast Asian Region
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Fishery Resource Enhancement: An Overview of the Current Situation and Issues in the Southeast Asian Region

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Lebata-RamosMJH2016a.pdf (147.3Kb)
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Date
2016
Author
Lebata-Ramos, Ma. Junemie Hazel
Doyola-Solis, Ellen Flor
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Abstract
The total global production from capture fisheries has plateaued since the mid 90s. This stagnation in production or reduced productivity of the world's coastal and marine wild fisheries is caused by overfishing and degradation of habitats through coastal development and destructive fishing methods. Reports have shown that if the current fishing trends continue, all of the commercial fisheries will have collapsed by 2050. To boost production, scientists, fisheries managers, government agencies, and NGOs have been looking at ways of enhancing fish stocks. Replenishing depleted stocks may be done by regulating fishing effort, restoring degraded nursery and spawning habitats or through resource enhancement. Resource enhancement using individuals reared in aquaculture facilities or seed stocks abundant in the wild is becoming a popular method of supplementing depleted stocks. It is one of the many strategies that could help address the decreasing fisheries production in the wild. A brief history of resource enhancement, the aquatic species released in the different countries in the region, the reasons for releasing stocks, and the issues involved, are discussed briefly in this paper. Among the main reasons for resource enhancement are to increase production or enhance stocks and increase food supply and/or family income. Other reasons include protection of endemic and maintenance of endangered species, rehabilitation of degraded natural habitats and for recreation fisheries, among others. Age or size of seeds, seed quality, genetics, governance, economics, biodiversity conservation, politics, and the introduction of exotics are among the resource enhancement issues identified in the region.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/707
Citation
Lebata-Ramos, M. H., & Doyola-Solis, E. F. (2016). Fishery resource enhancement: An overview of the current situation and issues in the Southeast Asian Region. In H. Kawamura, T. Iwata, Y. Theparoonrat, N. Manajit, & V. T. Sulit (Eds.), Consolidating the Strategies for Fishery Resources Enhancement in Southeast Asia. Proceedings of the Symposium on Strategy for Fisheries Resources Enhancement in the Southeast Asian Region, Pattaya, Thailand, 27-30 July 2015 (pp. 124-128). Samutprakan, Thailand: Training Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center.
Subject
research programmes; resource management; stocking (organisms); marine invertebrates; fishery institutions; resource conservation; stock assessment; stocks; marine molluscs; Ornamental fish; marine crustaceans; Philippines; Hippocampus; Tridacna gigas; Scylla; Holothuria scabra; Haliotis asinina
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  • Consolidating the Strategies for Fishery Resources Enhancement in Southeast Asia. Proceedings of the Symposium on Strategy for Fisheries Resources Enhancement in the Southeast Asian Region [32]

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