Guam's Small-Boat-based Fisheries


Autoria(s): Myers, Robert F.
Data(s)

1993

Resumo

Recent trends in Guam's small-boat fisheries and current knowledge of their biology, management, and economics are summarized. Annual estimates of participation, effort, and harvest are given for the pelagic and bottomfish fisheries for 1980-91 and for the spearfishing and atulai fisheries for 1985. The pelagic fishery is the largest, with annual landings ranging from 168 to 364 metric tons (t), followed by the bottomfish fishery (14-43 t), spearfishingf ishery (517 t), and bigeye scad fishery (3-20 t). All of the pelagic species are highly migratory and require regional management. They are heavily exploited by Guam-based domestic purse-seine and foreign longline fisheries, but region-wide catch and effort as well as the status of the stocks are largely unknown. Bottomfish and reef-fish stocks are shared to an unknown extent with those of the northern Marianas and are locally manageable. Certain vulnerable species of bottomfishes and reeffishes are overfished. Bottomfish and spearedfish landings are dominated by small species with high turnover rates.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/9880/1/mfr55214.pdf

Myers, Robert F. (1993) Guam's Small-Boat-based Fisheries. Marine Fisheries Review, 55(2), pp. 117-128.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/9880/

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries #Management
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed