The Current State of Knowledge on Mangrove Fishery Values

Published Article

Global

Publication date: January 1, 2015

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Mangroves are critical habitats for fisheries, supporting subsistence and commercial harvesting worldwide. This systematic review examines mangrove fisheries data, identifies major gaps in quantitative and comparable reporting, and provides recommendations to improve future data collection, reporting standards, and support effective fisheries management.

Subject Tags

  • Mangroves
  • Fisheries
  • Climate resilience

Abstract

orting resident fish, crustacean, and mollusk populations as well as acting as nursery grounds for species that are targeted by offshore fisheries. There is, however, a lack of quantitative data on fisheries that operate in and around mangroves. We carried out a systematic search to gather data on mangrove fisheries from the scientific literature. We filtered the 4,358 studies returned by the search based on their title and abstract and extracted data from 169 of these. Despite the abundance of literature on mangrove fisheries, we were unable to build a data set of comparable, quantitative data of sufficient size to support numerical modeling approaches. In part, this is due to the variety of mangrove fisheries, which range from small-scale subsistence fishing for mollusks and crabs to large-scale industrialized prawn trawling. This is compounded by the broad range of reporting methods and metrics encountered in the literature. We make a number of recommendations to guide the future reporting of mangrove fisheries to allow for better quantification and comparison of fisheries values at large spatial scales.

Citation

SPALDING, M. (2015). The Current State of Knowledge on Mangrove Fishery Values. In American Fisheries Society Symposium (Vol. 83, pp. 3-15).

TNC Authors

  • Mark Spalding
    Senior Marine Scientist • Protect Oceans, Lands and Waters
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: mspalding@tnc.org