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????? t?t?? d?af??e?a?

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First Workshop on Maritime Affairs in the Adriatic Ionian Macro-Region Hellenic Ministry of Foreign Affairs & EC Maritime Affairs and Fisheries – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ????? t?t?? d?af??e?a?


1
First Workshop on Maritime Affairs in the
Adriatic Ionian Macro-Region Hellenic Ministry of
Foreign Affairs EC Maritime Affairs and
Fisheries Athens, 14th February 2012
Fisheries Management possibilities for National
fish stocks in the Mediterranean Dr. Manos
Koutrakis Dr. A. Kallianiotis Fisheries
Research Institute Kavala, Greece www.inale.gr
Hellenic Agricultural Organization
2
Oceanographic characterisrics
  • MED 2.5 million km2 ? 0.8 of the total marine
    area of the world
  • Connection with
  • Black Sea (Bosporus strait),
  • Levantine basin (Crete, Karpathos, Rhodes),
  • Central Mediterranean
  • Two main types of water (cold Black Sea Water,
    Levantine Intermediate Water) .

3
Mediterranean Characteristics
  • Different fishing methods targeting the same
    species
  • Shared fish stocks and overlapped activities with
    third countries
  • Limited scientific information on fish stocks
  • Remarkable recreational fishing activity (at
    least 10 of total landings)
  • Many types of biotopes, limited in extension and
    with different characteristics
  • Many commercial fish species with overlapped
    biological cycles
  • Limited continental shelf
  • Limited or non existed EEZ (Exclusive Economic
    Zone)
  • Only Cyprus and Tunisia have an EEZ, while
    France, Spain, Malta and Croatia have declared
    different types of protection zones beyond their
    territorial waters (fishing protection zones,
    environmental protection zones)

4
Mediterranean Fisheries Characteristics
  • Large number of part time fishermen
  • Low daily income for the majority of the boats
  • Big number of ports and difficulties of control
    activities
  • Commercial high priced species
  • Coastal stocks still in good conditions

5
Fishing Fleet Trawling
  • The most active fishing method
  • The most studied fishing gear
  • The highest impact from all gears on the marine
    habitats
  • Many targeted species in depths from 30- 450 m

6
Fishing Fleet Surrounding nets
  • Traditional method-purse seine, using lights.
  • Mainly targeting small pelagic species with
    schooling behavior.
  • Fishing during the night when schools are
    distributed near the sea surface for feeding.
  • Pelagic fishing grounds in depths from 30-80 m.

7
Fishing Fleet Small scale fishery
  • Many types of fishing gears
  • Most of them are selective
  • Seasonally different targeted species
  • Fishing grounds in depths lt50 m

8
Mediterranean fisheries based on the analysis of
the FAO-Fishstat database
9
Requirements for the management of fish stocks
  • Environmental data v
  • Species biology data v
  • Fishing gear specifications v
  • Legislationv
  • Economical datav
  • Social data v
  • Holistic approach

10
EU collection and management of the data / Common
Fisheries Policy
  • COUNCIL REGULATION 1543/2000 of 29 June 2000
    Establishing a Community framework for the
    collection and management of the data needed to
    conduct the CFP.
  • COMMISSION REGULATION 1639/2001 of 25 July 2001
    Establishing the Community programmes for the
    collection of data in the fisheries sector and
    laying down detailed rules for the application of
    the Regulation 1543/2000
  • COMMISSION REGULATION 1581/2004 of 27 August
    2004 Amending Regulation 1639/2001.
  • COUNCIL REGULATION 199/2008 of 25 February 2008
    Establishment of a Community framework for the
    collection, management and use of data in the
    fisheries sector and support for scientific
    advice regarding the CFP.

11
EU collection and management of the data / Common
Fisheries Policy
Aims
  • The Community must take part in the effort
    undertaken in International waters to conserve
    fishery resources.
  • To conduct scientific evaluations needed for the
    Common Fishery Policy.
  • Data must be collected on the biology of the fish
    stocks, on the fleets and their activities and on
    economic and social issues.
  • To ensure the consistency of the system by
    creating a multiannual framework.

12
EU collection and management of the data / Common
Fisheries Policy
Rules to apply
  • EU STECF (Scientific, Technical Economic
    Committee on Fisheries) is responsible for the
    evaluation and progress of the national programs.
  • The programs must be implemented under the direct
    responsibility of the member states.
  • The programs require significant expenditure.
    Therefore, there is a community contribution to
    the member states (Minimum 50 - Extended 25).
  • The aggregated data have to be fed into
    computerized databases.
  • The conduct of the collection and the management
    programs should be regularly evaluated.

13
Monitoring of fishing fleet
  • Number of vessels
  • Gross tonnage (GT)
  • Engine power (Kw)
  • Age of vessel
  • Gear used
  • Time spent at sea during the year

14
Fishing effort
  • Fuel consumption and fishing effort by type of
    technique
  • Ports with significant landings
  • Geographical desegregation
  • Level of precision 10
  • By vessel category
  • By type of technique
  • Coastal boats chosen between active vessels

Specific fishing effort
  • Large pelagic species
  • Collection of fishing effort data
  • Processing and grouping of data per
  • Category of vessel
  • Fishing technique (métiers)
  • Geographical area

15
Catches and landings
  • Landings of demersal and small pelagic species
  • Assessment of overall production based on random
    observation of production per unit of effort

16
Discard sampling
  • Vessel categories
  • Otter trawls,
  • Purse seiners,
  • Netters,
  • long liners,
  • large pelagic species fishing vessels
  • Calculation of the length at which 50 of fish of
    a species are discarded
  • Stratification over time
  • Stratification over area
  • Sampling on board

17
Surveys of stocks-MEDITS
  • Desegregation in different geographical areas
  • Depth zones
  • Biological parameters (length, weight, sex,
    maturity stage)
  • Main targeted species
  • Secondary species

18
Biological sampling of landings
  • Priority species
  • Sampling of landing sites
  • Age at length
  • Length at first maturity
  • Sex composition
  • Maturity composition

19
Economic data
  • Desegregation by vessel types
  • Total income
  • Production cost
  • Fixed cost
  • Prices of fisheries products per tonne
  • Employment rate
  • Characteristics of fishing vessels

20
Data Base
  • Fishing capacity
  • Fishing effort
  • Catches and landings
  • Biological sampling through experimental fishery
  • Biological sampling of landings
  • Fish processing

21
Problems
  • Overfishing
  • Impact of fishing gears to the marine ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Illegal unreported fishery
  • Low level of fishermen organisation
  • Conflicts between fisheries sectors
  • Conflicts between fishermen from different
    countries (common stocks)
  • Impact from marine mammals (locally)
  • Non scientifically documented legislation and
    technical measures for the Mediterranean
    (national and EU).
  • Low stock monitoring
  • Scientific organisations and regional fisheries
    bodies for the monitoring of the Mediterranean
    fish stocks are limited

22
Overfishing
  • A FAO report (2005) named the Northeast Atlantic,
    and the Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea as
    regions with stocks in greatest need of recovery.
  • FAO's identified a number of Mediterranean stocks
    as overexploited, including bluefin tuna,
    Atlantic bonito, hake, swordfish, whiting,
    striped mullet and sea bream.
  • Catches of many species peaked in the late 1980s
    and early 1990s, have declined since (e.g. hake
    peaked in 1990s at 52,000 t but dropped by half
    by 2002).
  • The bluefin tuna was a major player in the
    Mediterranean fisheries for at least 2,500 years
    and today is overexploited. Catches peaked at
    39,000 t in 1994, but by 2002 dropped by nearly
    half to 22,000 t.
  • The GFCM's work demonstrates that regional
    fisheries bodies can take on a key role in
    building sustainable fisheries, even in settings
    like the Mediterranean where joint governance is
    not always easy.

23
Impact of fishing gears
Van Houtan Pauly, 2007. Snapshot Ghost of
destruction. Nature 447 123.
Scallop dredge
One of the key principles of ecosystem-based
fisheries management is the need to protect
ecosystems and populations by applying the
precautionary principle, which includes halting
destructive fishing methods (Chuenpagdee et al.,
2003, Front Ecol Environ, 1 517524).
24
Illegal fishery
  • Trawlers in some cases do not respect the
    distance form the shore or the depth zone, or the
    Posidonia beds.
  • Purse seines in some cases touch the bottom with
    the net.
  • Some small scale coastal boats do not respect the
    minimum mesh size, where is required. Few data on
    mesh selectivity.
  • Council Regulation (EC) 1967/2006 lays down
    certain technical measures for the conservation
    of fisheries sources in the Mediterranean.
  • Article 43.3 of this Regulation prohibits the use
    of bottom trawls, seines or similar nets above
    the Posidonia beds (Posidonia oceanica) or other
    marine phanerogams, which are listed as a
    priority habitat type under Annex I of the
    Habitats Directive (92/43/EEC)

25
Unreported fishery
  • The large number of landing ports and the spread
    of fishing boats in many bays and islands,
    create difficulties for the detection of landed
    quantities.
  • There are few official landing ports and the
    existing legislation does not oblige all the
    fishermen to declare their catches.

26
Impact from marine mammals
  • 1-3 species involved
  • Feeding on small scale fishermen nets reaches 48
    of the boats in the Gulf of Kavala
  • 48.9 of the 635 dolphins found dead last decade
    were shot by fishermen.

Tursiops truncatus
Delphinus delphis
Stenella coeruleoalba
27
New approaches to the management of fisheries in
the Mediterranean
28
FAO Code of conduct for responsible fisheries
  • Avoidance of changes that are potentially
    irreversible.
  • If the results of the exploitation are uncertain,
    priority should be given to conserving the
    reproductive capacity of the resource.
  • Harvesting capacity should be commensurate with
    the estimated sustainable level of the resource.
  • All fishing activities must have prior
    authorization and be subject to periodic review.
  • Establishment of institutional framework for
    fishery management.
  • Establishment of minimum landing size at length
    at first maturity.
  • Improvement of gear selectivity.
  • Limitation of by-catches and discards.
  • Average stock abundance relative to safety level.
  • Avoidance of risk of declining recruitment.
  • Large range of ages in the stock.
  • Wide geographic range of the populations.

29
FAO Code of conduct for responsible fisheries
  • Precautionary management avoid some outcomes as
  • Overexploitation of the resource
  • Over development of harvesting capacity
  • Loss of biodiversity
  • Major physical disturbances of sensitive biotopes
  • Major social or economic dislocations

30
Key steps in promoting effective and accountable
fisheries management Cohrane, FAO, 2000, Fish
and Fisheries 3-21
31
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)
  • MPAs are recognized by resource managers as a
    specialized and important tool, to generate
    downstream effects by enhancing the productivity
    of key species. The benefits created can
    potentially extend well beyond the boundary lines
    of MPAs.
  • MPAs in the Mediterranean According to the
    Venice EC Ministerial declaration (2003) the
    creation of fisheries protection zones permits
    the improvement of conservation and control of
    fisheries and thus contributes to better resource
    management.
  • The situation on MPAs in the Mediterranean is
    particularly complex because not all
    Mediterranean countries have ratified UNCLOS
    (United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea)
    that establishes the 12 nm as national waters and
    200 nm continental shelf.

32
Management plan for fishery sensitive areas
  • Prohibition of fishery in the spawning and
    nursery grounds
  • Guarantee of ecological or minimal flow of rivers
    in the regions with dams
  • Ensure good water quality in the estuaries
  • Monitoring of fishing activities and regulation
    on fished quantities

33
Artisanal Fisheries in the Mediterranean
  • The Mediterranean is a semi-static sea,
    characterized by a great variety of small sized
    and short living species but poor in fishery
    since it lacks large oceanic monospecific stocks
    (Farruggio,1989).
  • The development of semi-industrial and industrial
    fishery, has led to an overexploitation of many
    fishable resources (Garcia Reveret,1989).
  • The impoverishment of Mediterranean alieutic
    resources today imposes a reduction of fishing
    effort.
  • The return to the alieutic exploitation of the
    coastal zone through the development of artisanal
    fishery, appears mandatory for Mediterranean
    fishery (Durand, Farruggio Lemoine, 1989).
  • Artisanal fishery, even though it still
    represents the prevailing activity in many
    Mediterranean countries, has gone, in the past
    half century, towards an involution that has
    relegated it to a marginal role, from an economic
    and social point of view, creating an erosion of
    customs and traditions (Charbonnier Caddy,
    1986).
  • The recovery of artisanal fishery requires the
    modernization of the productive apparatus by
    means of the reconstruction of human and physical
    capital, currently subject to its rapid ageing
    process.

Andaloro F., Baro J., Coppola S.R., Koutrakis,
E.T, Intern. Conf. on Mediterranean Fisheries,
Naples, June 21-22, 2002
34
Co-management The use of co-management and the
devolution of fishery management functions to
right-holder associations
  • European waters have a very long history of local
    management.
  • COLLET (1999), points to continuum of a local
    management system in the Mediterranean based on
    the recognition of fishing territories and access
    regulation from the 3rd millennium BC (temple
    culture) down through the centuries via the
    medieval guilds and brotherhoods (Prudhomie in
    France Confradias in Spain) to modern times.
  • This tradition of local territorially-based
    management shows that the common pool resources
    of the seas were benefit of appropriate and
    effective management.
  • Many developing countries use Territorial User
    Rights (TURFs) where you allocate communities
    shares of the coastline, which provides
    incentives to manage stocks in a sustainable way.

35
Is the management of fishing resources feasible ?
  • v Yes, if we rate our objectives
  • v Yes, if we adapt the measures to the
    characteristics of each region
  • v Yes, if the fishermen cooperate with the rest
    of interested parties
  • v Yes, if we create a new mechanism for the
    application of management measures
  • v Yes, if we continue collecting and analyzing
    the essential data needed for the monitoring of
    the resources

36
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